Prenatal diagnosis of HLHS was associated with improved preoperative clinical status and with improved survival after first-stage palliation in comparison with patients diagnosed after birth.
The area-preserving 12-mm Y-graft is a promising modification of the Fontan procedure that should be clinically evaluated. Further work is needed to correlate our performance metrics with clinical outcomes, including exercise intolerance, incidence of protein-losing enteropathy, and thrombus formation.
Traditionally patients with pulmonary atresia, ventricular septal defect, diminutive or absent central pulmonary arteries, and multiple aortopulmonary collaterals have been managed by staged procedures necessitating multiple operations. We have taken a different approach to this lesion. Between August 1992 and March 1994, ten patients aged 1.43 months to 37.34 years (median 2.08 years) at the severe end of the morphologic spectrum of this lesion underwent a one-stage complete unifocalization and repair from a midline sternotomy approach. The median Nakata index of true pulmonary arteries was 50.0 (range 0 to 103.13) and they provided vascular supply to up to nine lung segments (median 5 segments). The number of collaterals per patient ranged from two to five with a median of four. The collaterals provided vascular supply to a median of 15 lung segments per patient (range 11 to 20). Complete unifocalization was achieved in all patients with emphasis on native tissue-to-tissue connections via anastomosis of collaterals to other collaterals and to the native pulmonary arteries. In only one patient (37.34 years old) was it necessary to use a non-native conduit for peripheral pulmonary artery reconstruction. The ventricular septal defect was left open in one patient (5 years old) because of diffuse distal hypoplasia and stenosis of the pulmonary arteries and the collaterals. The postrepair peak systolic right ventricular/left ventricular pressure ratio ranged from 0.31 to 0.58 (median 0.47). There were no early deaths. Complications were bleeding necessitating reexploration in one patient, phrenic nerve palsy in three patients, and severe bronchospasm in three patients. Follow-up (median 8 months, range 2 to 19 months) was complete in all patients. One patient was reoperated on for pseudoaneurysm of the central homograft conduit and then again for stenosis of the left lower lobe collateral. After this last operation at 13 months after the initial repair she died of a preventable cardiac arrest caused by pneumothorax. The patient with open ventricular septal defect underwent balloon dilation of the unifocalized pulmonary arteries, with a current pulmonary/systemic flow ratio of 1.4 to 1.8:1, and is awaiting ventricular septal defect closure. One other patient underwent balloon dilation of the reconstructed right pulmonary artery, with a good result. All survivors (9/10) are clinically doing well. This approach establishes normal cardiovascular physiology early in life, eliminates the need for multiple systemic-pulmonary artery shunts and use of prosthetic material, and minimizes the number of operations required.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
SUMMARY
Down syndrome (DS) results from full or partial trisomy of chromosome 21. However, the consequences of the underlying gene-dosage imbalance on adult tissues remain poorly understood. Here we show that in Ts65Dn mice, trisomic for 132 genes homologous to HSA21, triplication of Usp16 reduces self-renewal of hematopoietic stem cells and expansion of mammary epithelial cells, neural progenitors, and fibroblasts. Moreover, Usp16 is associated with decreased ubiquitination of Cdkn2a and accelerated senescence in Ts65Dn fibroblasts. Usp16 can remove ubiquitin from H2AK119, a critical mark for the maintenance of multiple somatic tissues. Downregulation of Usp16, either by mutation of a single normal USP16 allele or by shRNAs, largely rescues all these defects. Furthermore, in human tissues overexpression of USP16 reduces the expansion of normal fibroblasts and post-natal neural progenitors while downregulation of USP16 partially rescues the proliferation defects of DS fibroblasts. Taken together, these results suggest that USP16 plays an important role in antagonizing the self-renewal and/or senescence pathways in Down syndrome and could serve as an attractive target to ameliorate some of the associated pathologies.
Early 1-stage complete unifocalization can be performed in >90% of patients with pulmonary atresia and MAPCAs, even those with absent true pulmonary arteries, and yields good functional results. Complete repair during the same operation is achieved in two thirds of patients. There remains room for improvement; actuarial survival 3 years after surgery is 80%, and there is a significant rate of reintervention. These results must be appreciated within the context of the natural history of this lesion: 65% of patients survive to 1 year of age and slightly >50% survive to 2 years even with surgical intervention.
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