Abstract

Introduction: Pulmonary stenosis with an intact ventricular septum (PS-IVS) is one of the common causes of cyanotic heart disease in neonates with diverse morphologies as well as management and treatment protocols. The aim of this study was to evaluate short and midterm results of balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty (BPV) for this disorder. Methods: Between 2012 and 2016, Totally 45 neonates and infants under 6 months old were evaluated.The patients had a minimum right-to-left ventricular pressure ratio of 1, right-to-left shunting at the patent foramen ovale or atrial septal defect level, and tricuspid valve Z-scores higher than -4. Results: Immediately after the procedure, the right ventricular pressure dropped to the normal values in 8 (20%) patients. The immediate procedural success rate was seen in 42 (93.3%) cases: the right-to-left ventricular pressure ratio dropped to below 50% or the level of O2 saturation rose above 75%. Of three cases unresponsive to BPV, two of them underwent patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) stenting and one procedural death occurred. At 6 months’ follow-up, of 42 patients, this pressure was still with in the normal range in 36 (80%) infants, while it had returned to high values in 9 (20%) patients and necessitated repeat valvuloplasty. After BPV, severe pulmonary valve regurgitation was observed in14.2% patients; the condition was more common when high-profile noncompliant balloons were used. Conclusion: Balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty in infants with PS-IVS confers acceptable results insofar as it improves echocardiographic parameters and hemodynamic changes at short- and midterm followups.Balloon selection with sizes more than 1.2 of the diameter of the pulmonary valve annulus and the use of noncompliant high-pressure balloons results in higher degrees of pulmonary regurgitation.

Highlights

  • Pulmonary stenosis with an intact ventricular septum (PS-IVS) is one of the common causes of cyanotic heart disease in neonates with diverse morphologies as well as management and treatment protocols

  • Balloon Pulmonary Valvuloplasty in pulmonary stenosis of O2 saturation was below 75%

  • The types of balloons used for pulmonary valve valvuloplasty and degree of pulmonary valve regurgitation showed in Table 3.Dysplastic pulmonary valves were reported in 3 patients and PDAs with leftto-right shunts and the supply of the pulmonary blood flow from the patent ductus arteriosus were observed in 23 (51.1%)

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Summary

Introduction

Pulmonary stenosis with an intact ventricular septum (PS-IVS) is one of the common causes of cyanotic heart disease in neonates with diverse morphologies as well as management and treatment protocols. Pulmonary stenosis with intact ventricular septum (PS-IVS) is one of the frequent causes of cyanotic heart disease in neonates and infants,[1] requiring prompt management It is not a unique term because the diverse morphologies of this disorder call for different management approaches and its exact diagnosis requires the evaluation of clinical information, echocardiographic findings, and catheterization data.[2]. The decompression of the RV with BPV with or without ductal stenting has been accompanied by various short- and long-term prognoses in different studies.[5,6,7] we sought to evaluate both the short- and midterm results of Balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty in 45 neonates and infants with PS-IVS and the effects of our interventional procedures on the patients’ outcome

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