Fifteen patients with pulmonary atresia or critical pulmonary stenosis and intact ventricular septum were studied. All were operated on in the neonatal period, with valvotomy or a systemic to ...pulmonary arterial shunt, or both. In 12 patients, right ventricular to pulmonary arterial communication was established in the neonatal period. In three patients, only systemic to pulmonary arterial shunts were constructed. Six patients died. The median follow-up period for the surviving patients was 64 months (range, 12-87 months). Right and left atrial and ventricular dimensions and areas, the tricuspid annular diameter, and the cross-sectional area of the aortic root were measured in cross-sectional echocardiograms from the neonatal period, at the age of 1 year, and at the latest clinical follow-up. A classification of right ventricular morphology was made, based on identification of the inlet, the trabecular, and the outlet parts. Most of the patients had hypoplastic right ventricles at birth but at the latest follow-up, seven of nine surviving patients had right ventricles in the normal range. Right ventricular growth was better in patients who were given a right ventricular to pulmonary arterial communication in the neonatal period and those with complete right ventricular anatomy. The patients who died had severely hypoplastic right ventricles and small tricuspid valves.
Tricuspid valve stenosis and occlusion of superior vena cava are severe complications to Port-a-cath. In a child with SLE, symptoms started to develop about five to seven years after Port-a-cath ...insertion and cyclophosphamid injections. The patient developed hepatomegaly with abdominal and venous distension. Open heart surgery was necessary to remove the catheter. At operation it was found that the catheter was placed adjacent and through the tricuspid valve. The valve was severely stenosed with thrombus formation. The catheter and thrombus were removed, commissurotomy and bicuspidization of the valve and chordeal replacement performed to achieve an acceptable functional result. The superior vena cava was repaired with a pericardial patch. Retrospective analyses of the echocardiograms and chest x-rays show that the catheter was nearly related to the tricuspid valve and with the tip in the right ventricle. In such circumstances it is recommended with early withdrawal of the catheter, and in patients with immunological disease the indwelling time should be considered and limited.
A total of 25 children operated on for atrial septal defect were studied by cross-sectional echocardiography before and after operation. Right atrial and right ventricular dimensions and areas were ...measured preoperatively and 1-4 years (median, 32 months) postoperatively. The length, width, and area of the right atrium (RA) and the right ventricle (RV) were measured in the apical and the subcostal four-chamber views. The dimension of the RV outflow tract (RVOT) was measured in the parasternal short-axis view. Preoperatively, all group mean values except the subcostal four-chamber length of the RV were significantly larger than normal. After surgery, there was a significant decrease in all of the parameters studied, except for RV length. The mean postoperative values of RA measurements in the apical four-chamber view and of RVOT were still significantly larger than normal. The RV four-chamber measurements except the apical four-chamber length were not significantly enlarged. The greatest decrease in RA and RV size occurred in the first postoperative year. Longer follow-up periods did not change the measurements significantly.