Abstract

A transpulmonary arterial approach to the closure of a high ventricular septal defect (VSD) has been used, between 1978 and 1982, in eight patients. The reasons were ease of access and the wish to overcome the problems associated with right ventriculotomy. The patients' ages ranged from three weeks to 15 months, their weight from 2.9 kg to 9 kg. The approach was used both when the VSD was an isolated anomaly and when there were major associated defects. It is in this latter group, four with aortic arch anomalies, two with additional double outlet right ventricle (DORV), that avoidance of ventriculotomy was most helpful. It was especially important in the two patients with DORV and a perimembranous, outlet subpulmonary VSD, where it was possible to close off the left ventricular outflow tract and pulmonary valve using a patch, without opening the right ventricle, which was subsequently to become the systemic ventricle. This technique obviates the need for ventriculotomy in the closure of some perimembranous outlet and doubly committed subarterial VSDs, and is the approach of choice for the closure of a perimembranous, outlet, subpulmonary VSD in DORV.

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