OBJECTIVES
The aim of this study was to identify the predictors of death and of reintervention after mitral valve replacement (MVR) in children.
METHODS
A single-centre retrospective study was performed including 115 patients under the age of 18 undergoing MVR between 1982 and 2019. For all patients, the ratio of prosthetic valve size (diameter in mm) to weight (kg) at surgery was calculated and long-term result was assessed. The primary outcome was freedom from mitral valve (MV) re-replacement. The composite secondary outcome was freedom from death or transplant.
RESULTS
Fifty-four patients had a previous surgical attempt to MV repair. The median age at surgery was 5.5 years (interquartile range 1.21–9.87). Death/transplant-free survival was 77 ± 4% at 5 years and 72 ± 5% at 10 years. Univariate analysis showed a size/weight ratio higher than 2 and age <2 years as significant risk factors for death or transplant. Freedom from MV re-replacement at 5 and 10 years was 90 ± 3% and 72 ± 6%, respectively. Biological prosthesis implanted at first replacement (P = 0.007) and size/weight ratio higher than 2 (P = 0.048) were predictors of reoperation. Significant upsizing (P < 0.0001) of mitral prosthesis was observed at re-replacement.
CONCLUSIONS
MVR is a viable strategy in children with unrepairable MV disease. Mortality can be predicted based on size/weight ratio and age <2 years. MV re-replacement can be performed with low morbidity and mortality and a larger-size prosthesis can often be placed at the time of redo.
Crossed pulmonary arteries (CPAs) represent an uncommon anatomic variant, usually associated with some specific syndromes and conotruncal defects. This finding has been described in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome (22q11.2DS). We evaluated the correlation between CPAs and genetic diseases, in order to better define the characteristics of this variant, considered a rare anatomic pattern. An in-depth analysis of CPAs genotype-phenotype correlations was performed via a literature review. We detected 74 CPAs patients through echocardiography. Of these 74 patients, 35.1% of patients showed additional intracardiac malformations, while 29.7% showed extracardiac vascular anomalies, of which 16.2% were associated with intracardiac defects and 13.5% were not. In all, 62.2% of patients were diagnosed with genetic diseases and 52.2% of them were 22q11.2DS patients. In conclusions, CPAs represent a cardiovascular variant, which is detectable in nonsyndromic individuals, but especially in various genetic syndromes and in particular in 22q11.2DS patients. Data on the real prevalence of this morphology is lacking in literature. Knowledge of this anatomic variant is useful to interpret the unusual course of the pulmonary branches and is helpful information before cardiovascular surgical correction. Moreover, due to the strong association of CPAs with some genetic syndromes, the identification of this anatomic pattern can indicate the utility of a genetic assessment of these patients.
Introduction: Ventricular septal defect (VSD) is one of the mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction (MI), whose incidence has been decreasing throughout the years because of the emergence of different reperfusion therapy strategies. Methods: We present a series of seven patients who underwent surgery for post-MI VSD repair in our institution in the period between March 2020 and June 2021. Discussion: During the recent SARS-COV2 pandemic, time to hospital admission increased due to patients being overcautious out of fear of exposing themselves to COVID-19. The increased time to hospital admission, with associated late reperfusion therapy and delayed PCI, is closely related to an augmented incidence of post-myocardial infarction mechanical complications such as ventricular septal defects. For this reason, we witnessed an increase in the incidence of post-MI VSD.
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