ObjectiveTo explore risk factors associated with mortality and restenosis after the surgery for congenital pulmonary venous stenosis (CPVS) combined with congenital heart disease.MethodsFrom May 2007 to August 2019, 58 patients received surgical relief of CPVS combined with congenital heart disease, including 24 males and 34 females, aged 17.2±26.3 months, weighing 8.8±8.2 kg. Endpoints were death and restenosis, and the risk factors were analyzed. A univariate and multivariate risk analyses were performed.ResultsPreoperative pulmonary venous stenosis severity score (PVSSS) was 4.5±2.7. Average pulmonary vein counts with CPVS was 1.9±1.0. There were 2 (3.4%) early deaths. The mean follow-up time was 2-145 (49.8±40.0) months. The 1-, 2-, 3- and 5-year overall survival rates were 86.7%, 81.3%, 78.5% and 73.6%, respectively, and the pulmonary venous restenosis-free rates were 79.6%, 68.5%, 68.5% and 68.5%, respectively. Preterm birth was an independent risk factor for mortality. The pulmonary venous peak flow rate ≥1.2 m/s at discharge was an independent risk factor for mortality and restenosis.ConclusionThe prognosis of CPVS is still poor. Postoperative residual stenosis at discharge is an independent risk factor for death and restenosis.
Congenital heart disease (CHD) is a series of structural cardiac abnormalities resulting from abnormal fetal heart development. With the prolongation of survival time, their cognitive function problems begin to be concerned. From fetus period to adulthood, people with complex CHD are more likely to have abnormalities in brains. Children with complex CHD have a significantly increased risk of developmental disorders in cognitive functions, such as intelligence, attention and psychosocial disorders. These diseases persist into their adulthood. Adults with CHD have earlier neurocognitive decline, poorer performance in intelligence, executive function, attention and academic achievement, and are more likely to have mood disorders, higher incidence of mental disorders and lower quality of life. This paper reviews the studies on cognitive function of adult patients with CHD from the dimension of the whole life cycle.
Bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis(BCPA)is a palliative method used in the single ventricular repair. It mainly includes bidirectional Glenn shunt and hemi-Fontan operation. The indications of BCPA are those as an intermediate option of total cavopulmonary anastomosis, partial biventricular or 1 1/2 ventricle repair and a practical approach to complex congenital heart surgery. The choise of age,influence on pulmonary artery maturation,remain of additional pulmonary flow,formation of collaters and time to Fontan are demand of study.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the possibility of monitoring regional tissue oxygen saturation by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) for early predicting adverse events in patients with pulmonary atresia.MethodsTwenty-six patients aged under 3 months who were diagnosed with pulmonary atresia and admitted to cardiovascular intensive care unit in our hospital between January 2016 and May 2017, accepted regional tissue oxygenation (cerebral and splanchnic) by near-infrared spectroscopy. There were 19 males and 7 females at age of 2–89 days. A total of 625 times of heart rate, blood pressure, pulse saturation, regional tissue oxygenation, and 98 serum lactate were retrospectively analyzed. The relationship of the tissue oxygen saturation and clinical adverse events was explored.ResultsThe adverse event by routine monitoring was 69 (11.04%) person-time: isolated hypoxia in 27, hypoxia combined increased lactate in 16, hypotension in 6, hypotension combined increased lactate in 17, isolated increased lactate in 3. A reduction of 12.80% in cranial oxygen predicted the high probability of adverse events, with a sensitivity of 85.30% and a specificity of 87.00%. A reduction of 20.60% in splanchnic oxygen predicted the high probability of adverse event, with a sensitivity of 73.50% and a specificity of 91.2%. On average, the splanchnic oxygenation had fell 3 minutes before a reduction of blood pressure, or 45 minutes before an increase in lactate.ConclusionFor preoperative patients with pulmonary atresia, a fall of 12.80% in cranial oxygen saturations, or of 20.60% in splanchnic oxygen saturation, should attract clinician’s awareness.
Objective To investigate the surgery experience of modified intra/extracardiac conduit total cavopulmonary connection (TCPC). Methods We retrospectively analyzed clinical data of 47 patients of complex congenital heart disease undergoing intra/extracardiac conduit total cavopulmonary connection in our hospital between January 2008 and December 2015. There were 29 males and 18 females with a median age of 7 years (range 4 to 9 years) and median body weight of 22 kg (range 14 to 38 kg). The heart echocardiography and cardiac imaging confirmed diagnosis suitable for TCPC surgery. Results There was no early death in the whole group. The mean pulmonary arterial pressure was 16 (12–20) mm Hg and the ventilation time was 14 (7–97) h. The main complications were intractable pleural effusion in 7 patients, low cardiac output syndrome in 3 patients, repeated supraventricular tachycardia in 1 patient. All the patients recovered after treatment. At the end of discharge, the percutaneous oxygen saturation was 85%–96% (92.6%±3.3%). The echocardiography showed the conduit pressure was 0–2 mm Hg. Patients were followed up for 1 to 7 years. Three patients were lost. One patient had intestinal nutrition loss, receving repeated pleural effusion, the treatment was ineffective, died after 4 years. Four patients of repeated pleural effusion improved after treatment. One patient repeated attacks supraventricular tachycardia within 1 year, controlled by amiodaronum, already stopped about 28 months. No recurrence occurred. All survivors were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class Ⅰ or Ⅱ, with good activity tolerance. Conclusion The modified intra/extracardiac conduit TCPC combines the advantages of both the lateral tunnel and the extracardiac conduit. The operation is simple, used in the treatment of complex congenital heart disease. The short-term and mid-term results are encouraging.
At present, the operative results of complex congenital heart disease are suboptimal which is closely correlated to the understanding of the anatomy and function of complex congenital heart disease, and operative techniques. With the further understanding to pathology and physiology of congenital heart disease, strategies and techniques in well-known operations and complex procedures have developed in recent years. Currently, designing and applying individual operative method in terms of patient’s characteristics of anatomy and physiology is very important trend. This article reviewed the advances of knowledgement and techniques in some representive complex congenital heart disease including complete atrioventricular septal defect, unifocalization for major aortopulmonary collateral arteries, transopsition of the great artery and Fontan type operation.
Objective To assess the mid- and long-term outcomes of right ventricular outflow tract reconstruction for children with congenital heart disease. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 3 138 children with complex congenital heart disease in right heart system admitted to our hospital from January 2007 to January 2017. There were 1 660 males and 1 478 females. The age at surgery was 9 days to 84 months, and the body weight was 2.2 to 28.6 kg. Pulmonary patch enlargement was performed in 2 335 patients (1 477 patients of valve-sparing repair and 858 patients of transannular repair); autologous tissue (direct anastomosis, left auricle or pericardial conduit) was used to connect with right ventricle in 289 patients; extracardiac conduits were used for reconstruction in 514 patients. Results There were 181 in-hospital deaths with a mortality of 5.8%. The early postoperative causes of death were low cardiac output syndrome (LCOS), severe pulmonary hypertension and right heart failure. Fifteen patients died of cardiac insufficiency or sudden death during follow-up (6–27 months postoperatively). The echocardiography showed 408 patients with right ventricular outflow tract obsturction (RVOTO), 340 patients with pulmonary trunk or branches stenosis, 609 with pulmonary regurgitation (morderate or severe). 12.6% (394/3 138) of patients underwent reintervention or reoperation with 39 deaths. About 92.4% of patients exhibited an improvement of New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class from Ⅲ or Ⅳ preoperatively to Ⅰ or Ⅱ at follow-up. Conclusion The anatomical structure of right ventricular outflow tract is complicated and various, and each operation method has different strengths and favorable outcomes. The operation should be individually designed according to pathological types, anatomical features, clinical symptoms and operation conditions.
Cardiac auscultation is the basic way for primary diagnosis and screening of congenital heart disease(CHD). A new classification algorithm of CHD based on convolution neural network was proposed for analysis and classification of CHD heart sounds in this work. The algorithm was based on the clinically collected diagnosed CHD heart sound signal. Firstly the heart sound signal preprocessing algorithm was used to extract and organize the Mel Cepstral Coefficient (MFSC) of the heart sound signal in the one-dimensional time domain and turn it into a two-dimensional feature sample. Secondly, 1 000 feature samples were used to train and optimize the convolutional neural network, and the training results with the accuracy of 0.896 and the loss value of 0.25 were obtained by using the Adam optimizer. Finally, 200 samples were tested with convolution neural network, and the results showed that the accuracy was up to 0.895, the sensitivity was 0.910, and the specificity was 0.880. Compared with other algorithms, the proposed algorithm has improved accuracy and specificity. It proves that the proposed method effectively improves the robustness and accuracy of heart sound classification and is expected to be applied to machine-assisted auscultation.
ObjectiveTo explore the anesthesia management experience in the interventional treatment of pediatric congenital heart diseases (CHD) percutaneously guided by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) on a mobile operating platform. Methods From March to July 2023, a total of 13 patients from remote areas underwent interventional treatment for CHD on the mobile operating platform of Fuwai Yunnan Cardiovascular Hospital. Patients who received non-tracheal intubation general anesthesia were retrospectively included. ResultsEight children who had difficulty cooperating with the surgery (due to young age, emotional tension, crying) received monitored anesthesia care with local anesthesia supplemented by sedative and analgesic drugs while maintaining spontaneous breathing under the monitoring and management of an anesthesiologist (i.e., non-tracheal intubation general anesthesia). Among them, there were 5 males and 3 females, with an age of (6.95±3.29) years and a body weight of (19.50±6.04) kg. Through transthoracic echocardiography, they were diagnosed with atrial septal defect (6 patients), residual shunt after patent ductus arteriosus ligation (1 patient), and severe pulmonary valve stenosis (1 patient). The surgery proceeded smoothly, with satisfactory anesthesia and surgical effects, complete analgesia, and satisfactory postoperative recovery. There was 1 patient of body movement and 1 patient of respiratory depression during the operation, and both patients completed the surgery successfully after treatment. All children had no serious surgery- and anesthesia-related complications. The anesthesia time was 40.5 (34.5, 47.5) min, the surgery time was 39.0 (33.0, 45.5) min, and the recovery time was 43.0 (28.0, 52.5) min Conclusion Interventional surgery for CHD guided by TTE at a mobile platform is a minimally invasive approach without radiation damage. Non-tracheal intubation general anesthesia with spontaneous breathing can be safely and effectively implemented in children who cannot cooperate.
ObjectiveTo investigate the clinical efficacy and application value of percutaneous interventional treatment for structural heart diseases under guidance of ultrasound.MethodsThe clinical data of 1 010 patients with structural heart diseases treated by transcutaneous ultrasound-guided occlusion in our hospital from December 2, 2015 to December 31, 2019 were retrospectively reviewed, including 360 males and 650 females, aged 1-50 years. There were 692 patients of atrial septal defect (603 with central type, 9 combined with arterial catheter, 80 with ethmoid type), 116 patent foramen ovale, 25 ventricular septal defects (3 combined with atrial septal defect), 132 patent ductus arteriosus, 32 pulmonary valve stenosis (3 combined with atrial defect), 1 main pulmonary artery window, and 3 aneurysm rupture of aortic sinus. All patients were diagnosed by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) before operation. Treatment was accomplished intraoperatively through TTE or transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) via the femoral artery or femoral vein. After operation, echocardiography, electrocardiogram and chest radiograph were reexamined.ResultsSatisfactory results were obtained in 1 005 patients, and 1 patient failed to seal the ventricular defect and was repaired under direct vision, occluder detachment occurred in 5 patients after operation (3 patients of atrial septal defects underwent thoracotomy for Amplatzer device and were repaired, 1 patient of atrial septal defects was closed after removing Amplatzer device, 1 patient of patent ductus arteriosus underwent thoracotomy for Amplatzer device and was sutured), mild pulmonary valve regurgitation occurred after balloon dilation in 2 patients with pulmonary stenosis, a small amount of residual shunt was found in 2 patients with ventricular defect, which disappeared after 3 months of follow-up, and 1 patient of right bundle branch block occurred and disappeared after 1 week. After follow-up of 1-24 months, 3 patients of ethmoidal atrial septal defect were reexamined with mild shunt. The occluder was in good position and the pressure difference of pulmonary valve was significantly reduced. There was no complication such as hemolysis, arrhythmia, embolism or rupture of chordae tendinae.ConclusionPercutaneous transfemoral artery and vein guided by TTE or TEE is safe and effective, with little trauma, no radiation or contrast agent damage, and has significant clinical efficacy and application values.