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Arterial switch operation for transposition of the great arteries: surgical techniques to avoid complications.
Authors:H Yasui  K Yonenaga  H Kado  Y Nakamura  N Fusazaki  Y Tsuruhara  A Nakashima  R Tominaga  Y Kawachi  K Tokunaga
Affiliation:Department of Cardiac Surgery, Kyushu University School of Medicine, Fukuoka, Japan.
Abstract:
From June 1984 to November 1990, 109 patients with transposition of the great arteries underwent arterial switch operation. There were 5 deaths, yielding a mortality rate of 4.6%. During this period, modifications of the surgical technique were devised to minimize intra- and postoperative problems, such as bleeding, kinking of the coronary arteries, aortic regurgitation and pulmonary stenosis. The surgical refinements that evolved include (1) a more distal division of the ascending aorta, (2) a punch technique for reimplantation of the coronary arteries in a medially rotated position, approximating the commissure, and superior to the upper border of the sinus of Valsalva, and (3) removal of left coronary ostia by incision down from the transected site to include a button of aortic wall, avoiding the free margin of the aorta and patch enlargement of the neopulmonary artery. Since instituting these refinements: (1) the time consumed for hemostasis after termination of the bypass considerably decreased from 111 +/- 59 to 87 +/- 51 minutes (p less than 0.05), (2) the incidence of kinking of the coronary arteries decreased from 29% (4/14) to 7% (6/88) (p less than 0.05), and (3) the occurrence of aortic insufficiency 1 year after correction was reduced from 36% (5/14) to 8% (5/66) (p less than 0.02). However, the occurrence of pulmonary stenosis with a pressure gradient greater than 30 mmHg did not decrease significantly despite aggressive modifications of surgical techniques, and its incidence in the most recent series of 32 patients was still a high 19%.
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