Infundibular stenosis may develop secondary to ventricular septal defect, and transannular patch plasty can affect mortality and morbidity rates. Therefore, dextroposition of the aorta has been investigated in order to eliminate discrepancies in the literature. Figures and illustrations from the selected references have been investigated and "actual dextroposition of the aorta" has been evaluated as far as the aorta is visible. A careful examination of these figures revealed the following tips and pearls for accurate diagnosis of dextroposition of the aorta: Aorta and ventricular septal defect should be adjacent for a "true" dextroposition of the aorta; the plane where the aorta exits from the ventricle should penetrate the plane of the ventricular septal defect towards the right ventricle; if the aorta and ventricular septal defect intersect at one edge, the aorta may seem to be dextroposed; new diagnostic modalities are necessary to evaluate the actual dextroposition status of the aorta for the proper planning of treatment.
BACKGROUND: Penetrating cardiac injuries are high-risk, high-mortality injuries considering the outcomes. Therefore, it is important to choose the appropriate incision. In general clinical settings, thoracotomy and median sternotomy are choices of incisions to explore the injury. In this study, the results of median sternotomy and thoracotomy in penetrating cardiac injuries were compared.
IntroductionAtrial septal defect (ASD) transcatheter occlusion techniques are now established as the preferred method and have become an alternative to surgery under extracorporeal circulation. In this study, we aimed to present our emergency surgical approach to cases of device embolization due to migration of the atrial septal defect occluder.Material and methodsBetween June 2009 and June 2011, 6 patients underwent emergency operations due to device emboli secondary to migration of the transcatheter atrial septal defect occluder during the early period. Mean age was 25.5 years (15–45) and 3 of the patients were female (50%). The diagnosis was made via transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) preoperatively.ResultsAll of these 6 patients underwent emergency operations. Mean postoperative intensive care unit (ICU) stay was 2.2 days and mean hospital stay was 6 days. No early or late postoperative mortality was seen. Mean postoperative follow-up time was 19.3 months (range: 5–28 months). Early- and late-period TTE examinations showed no residual interatrial shunting. One patient developed a right atrial thrombus in the postoperative 22nd month as a complication of long-term follow-up. He was treated with anticoagulant therapy for 6 months with complete resolution at the TTE.ConclusionsTranscatheter occlusion of secundum type ASD provides prominent clinical improvement, as well as a regression in dimensions of cardiac chambers. Nevertheless, this technique has drawbacks such as distal migration and residual shunts. Consequently, we think that unfavorable anatomy and device diameter are major issues in device migration. Oversizing also increases the migration risk.
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