Abstract
To determine the effect of heart donor and recipient size mismatches in infant and pediatric heart transplantation, we studied all 69 patients (age 1 day to 11 years) having 71 orthotopic heart transplants from 1985 to 1989. Patients were divided into three groups based on donor to recipient weight ratios. Group I comprised 13 heart transplants with a donor to recipient weight ratio less than 0.95 (mean 0.81, range 0.48 to 0.94); group II comprised 29 heart transplants with a weight ratio between 0.95 and 1.60 (mean 1.28); and group III had 27 heart transplants with weight ratios greater than 1.60 (mean 2.2, range 1.61 to 3.09). All chests were closed primarily. The cardiothoracic ratio by chest radiography was significantly larger in group III (p = 0.0002); 75% of group III patients had periods of lobar or complete lung collapse by chest radiography compared with 28% of group II and 19% of group I patients (p < 0.05). Despite this, there was no difference in the number of days of ventilator support for any group (p = 0.92). There was no difference in graft ischemic time or inotropic drug use among groups, nor were differences found in the cardiac systolic function parameters of left ventricular preejection time (p = 0.975), left ventricular ejection time (p = 0.975), left ventricular fiber shortening (p = 0.97), and left ventricular fractional shortening (p = 0.596). Thus despite a high incidence of transient lobar or complete lung collapse in high donor to recipient weight ratio transplants, large donor heart size produces very little clinical impairment in recipient lung function. Size mismatches do not influence cardiac systolic function. Overall, large size mismatches appear to be very well tolerated in infant and pediatric heart transplantation.
Published Version
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