Circulation, Vol 60, 59-69, Copyright © 1979 by American Heart Association
PG Bjornstad, H Rastan, J Keutel, AJ Beuren and J Koncz
A new therapeutic concept of enlarging the outflow tracts of both
ventricles with a patch and inserting an aortic prosthesis has been
developed for the treatment of tunnel subaortic stenosis. This operation
has been applied clinically since June 1974 on several types of obstruction
in the outflow tract of the left ventricle. Twenty-one operations have been
performed on 20 patients under the age of 18 years, with an overall
mortality of 24% and no late deaths. Seven patients developed complete
right bundle branch block or left anterior hemiblock or both as a result of
this operation; transient atrioventricular block and complete left bundle
branch block occurred in one patient each. In no case, however, did rhythm
disturbances contribute to death. In one patient, the septal incision
injured a septal coronary artery, with fatal result. Fourteen patients had
catheterization studies postoperatively. Although previous conventional
surgery had been unsuccessful, aortoventriculoplasty (AoVPI) reduced the
mean gradient across the left ventricular outflow tract significantly (p
less than or equal to 0.01), from 94.7 +/- 25.5 mm Hg to 14.4 +/- 17.2 mm
Hg, leaving the end-diastolic pressure practically unchanged. No
significant defect remained in the patch-covered septal incision. Thus, we
consider AoVPI to be the operation of choice for tunnel subaortic stenosis,
for valvular aortic stenosis with a narrow annulus and in cases where an
artificial aortic valve has become too small because of the patient's
growth.
ARTICLES
Aortoventriculoplasty for tunnel subaortic stenosis and other obstructions of the left ventricular outflow tract. Clinical and hemodynamic results
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