Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia

Recently, surgical outcomes of repair of tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) have improved. For patients with TOF older than 3 months, primary repair has been advocated regardless of symptoms. However, a surgical approach to symptomatic TOF in neonates or very young infants remains elusive. Traditionally, the...

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Main Authors: Chang-Ha Lee, Jae Gun Kwak, Cheul Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Pediatric Society 2014-01-01
Series:Korean Journal of Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://kjp.or.kr/upload/pdf/kjped-57-19.pdf
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spelling doaj-e3d66ead97a94ab78e52c557877faf5b2020-11-24T21:24:02ZengKorean Pediatric SocietyKorean Journal of Pediatrics1738-10612092-72582014-01-01571192510.3345/kjp.2014.57.1.192013600051Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresiaChang-Ha Lee0Jae Gun Kwak1Cheul Lee2Department of Thoracic Cardiovascular Surgery, Sejong General Hospital, Bucheon, Korea.Department of Thoracic Cardiovascular Surgery, Sejong General Hospital, Bucheon, Korea.Department of Thoracic Cardiovascular Surgery, Sejong General Hospital, Bucheon, Korea.Recently, surgical outcomes of repair of tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) have improved. For patients with TOF older than 3 months, primary repair has been advocated regardless of symptoms. However, a surgical approach to symptomatic TOF in neonates or very young infants remains elusive. Traditionally, there have been two surgical options for these patients: primary repair versus an initial aortopulmonary shunt followed by repair. Early primary repair provides several advantages, including avoidance of shunt-related complications, early relief of hypoxia, promotion of normal lung development, avoidance of ventricular hypertrophy and fibrosis, and psychological comfort to the family. Because of advances in cardiopulmonary bypass techniques and accumulated experience in neonatal cardiac surgery, primary repair in neonates with TOF has been performed with excellent early outcomes (early mortality<5%), which may be superior to the outcomes of aortopulmonary shunting. A remaining question regarding surgical options is whether shunts can preserve the pulmonary valve annulus for TOF neonates with pulmonary stenosis. Symptomatic neonates and older infants have different anatomies of right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) obstructions, which in neonates are nearly always caused by a hypoplastic pulmonary valve annulus instead of infundibular obstruction. Therefore, a shunt is less likely to preserve the pulmonary valve annulus than is primary repair. Primary repair of TOF can be performed safely in most symptomatic neonates. Patients who have had primary repair should be closely followed up to evaluate the RVOT pathology and right ventricular function.http://kjp.or.kr/upload/pdf/kjped-57-19.pdfTetralogy of FallotNeonateEarly primary repairPalliation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chang-Ha Lee
Jae Gun Kwak
Cheul Lee
spellingShingle Chang-Ha Lee
Jae Gun Kwak
Cheul Lee
Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
Korean Journal of Pediatrics
Tetralogy of Fallot
Neonate
Early primary repair
Palliation
author_facet Chang-Ha Lee
Jae Gun Kwak
Cheul Lee
author_sort Chang-Ha Lee
title Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
title_short Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
title_full Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
title_fullStr Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
title_full_unstemmed Primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of Fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
title_sort primary repair of symptomatic neonates with tetralogy of fallot with or without pulmonary atresia
publisher Korean Pediatric Society
series Korean Journal of Pediatrics
issn 1738-1061
2092-7258
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Recently, surgical outcomes of repair of tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) have improved. For patients with TOF older than 3 months, primary repair has been advocated regardless of symptoms. However, a surgical approach to symptomatic TOF in neonates or very young infants remains elusive. Traditionally, there have been two surgical options for these patients: primary repair versus an initial aortopulmonary shunt followed by repair. Early primary repair provides several advantages, including avoidance of shunt-related complications, early relief of hypoxia, promotion of normal lung development, avoidance of ventricular hypertrophy and fibrosis, and psychological comfort to the family. Because of advances in cardiopulmonary bypass techniques and accumulated experience in neonatal cardiac surgery, primary repair in neonates with TOF has been performed with excellent early outcomes (early mortality<5%), which may be superior to the outcomes of aortopulmonary shunting. A remaining question regarding surgical options is whether shunts can preserve the pulmonary valve annulus for TOF neonates with pulmonary stenosis. Symptomatic neonates and older infants have different anatomies of right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) obstructions, which in neonates are nearly always caused by a hypoplastic pulmonary valve annulus instead of infundibular obstruction. Therefore, a shunt is less likely to preserve the pulmonary valve annulus than is primary repair. Primary repair of TOF can be performed safely in most symptomatic neonates. Patients who have had primary repair should be closely followed up to evaluate the RVOT pathology and right ventricular function.
topic Tetralogy of Fallot
Neonate
Early primary repair
Palliation
url http://kjp.or.kr/upload/pdf/kjped-57-19.pdf
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