Abstract

To review the efficacy of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (TAPVC) repair and to conclude the factors impacting the peri-operative death rate. The clinical data of 145 infants under 1 year old who underwent the TAPVC repair from January 2001 to July 2008 was analyzed. There were 94 male and 51 female patients. The mean age when the repair was performed was (7 ± 3) months, and the average weight was (6.3 ± 1.6) kg. As to the pulmonary connection type, 77 patients were supracardiac (53.1%), 47 patients were cardiac (32.4%), 9 patients were intracardiac (6.2%), and the remaining 12 patients were mixed (8.3%). Pre-surgery echocardiography showed that 21 patients had pulmonary venous obstruction (12 patients were supracardiac type, 3 patients were cardiac type, 3 patients were intracardiac type, and 3 patients were mixed type). All patients underwent two-ventricle anatomy correction (the cases of complex malformations had been excluded). Peri-operative mortality was 11.7% (17/145). Because of the significant improvement in the surgical techniques, anesthesiology, cardiopulmonary bypass and the management of ICU in January 2006, the population was divided into two groups: A (before January 2006) and B (after January 2006). Peri-operative mortality decreased from 19.0% in group A to 6.2% in group B(P = 0.020). After analysis, it was determined that the factors impacting mortality were which group the patient belongs to, whether he/she had preoperative pulmonary vein obstruction and how big the atril septel connection was. The operative technique to keep the anastomotic aperture adequate and prophylaxis pulmonary hypertensive episodes contributed to the improvement on the mortality rate. There had been no case of repeating the surgery because of pulmonary venous obstruction during peri-operative care period. Improvements of the surgical technique as well as the treatment in preoperative and postoperative have led to the reduction of the mortality. Preoperative pulmonary vein obstruction is still an important factor that contributes to early mortality.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call