Abstract

This study is aimed at comparing cardiac computed tomographic angiography (CTA) with echocardiography in the assessment of ventricular septal perforation diameter. A total of 44 ventricular septal rupture (VSR) patients undertaking transcatheter occlusion were included and randomly divided into the CTA group and echocardiography group with a 1 : 1 ratio. Clinical data, operation-related data, and 30 d follow-up data were collected and analyzed. Incidence of closure failure, occluder displacement, poor occluder molding, and occluder waist diameter shrinkage between the two groups were not statistically different. The mean residual shunt volume in the echocardiography group (4.2 (3.1, 5.9) mm) was significantly higher than that in the CTA group (2.1 (0, 4.0) mm) with a p value of 0.005. However, no significant differences were found in all-cause mortality and incidence of operative complications within 30 days after surgery. Within the CTA group, the correlation was strongest between postoperative occluder diameter and long diameter measured by CTA with a correlation coefficient of 0.799 and p < 0.001, followed by the correlation between postoperative occluder diameter and mean diameter measured by CTA with a correlation coefficient of 0.740 and p < 0.001. The diameter measured by echocardiography was not correlated to postoperative occlude diameter. Assessment of VSR diameter by cardiac CTA is more accurate than by echocardiography.

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