Abstract

Aortic arch repair has been shifted from deep hypothermia plus circulatory arrest to cerebral perfusion at tepid temperatures. A step forward is a simultaneous brain-coronary perfusion, allowing beating-heart arch surgery. A 'Y' cannula from the arterial line delivers oxygenated blood to brain and heart. The arch is repaired on a beating heart at 25°C. Intracardiac repair is performed after running cardioplegia through the root line. Fifty patients are classified into 3 groups: A, Norwood (8 neonates); B, aortic arch (14 children) and C, aortic arch plus intracardiac repair (28 patients). Associated anomalies in Group C are as follows: ventricular septal defect (10), arterial switch (5), atrial septal defect (4), cor triatriatum (3), aortic commissurotomy (2), comprehensive repair (2), ostium primum (1) and Yasui (1). The mean bypass time was 161 ± 54.44 (range 93-312) min. Mean brain-coronary perfusion was 37.26 ± 10.54 (18-60) min. Mean coronary ischaemia was 31 ± 32.40 (0-160) min. The heart was not arrested in Group B patients. Follow-up was complete for a mean of 30 (1-48) months. Four patients died in the postoperative period. Two required angioplasty for recoarctation. Selective brain-coronary perfusion is feasible and easy to switch to conventional cardioplegia delivery. Coronary ischaemia can be notably reduced and even 0 min in isolated arch surgery.

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