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. 2012 Jan;40(1):22-5.
doi: 10.5543/tkda.2012.01679.

[Long term follow-up of 799 children with isolated ventricular septal defects]

[Article in Turkish]
Affiliations
Free article

[Long term follow-up of 799 children with isolated ventricular septal defects]

[Article in Turkish]
Sevcan Erdem et al. Turk Kardiyol Dern Ars. 2012 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

Objectives: We evaluated long-term follow-up results and prognosis of pediatric patients with isolated ventricular septal defects (VSD).

Study design: The study included 799 patients (368 girls, 431 boys; mean age at diagnosis 24.3±37.4 months; median 6 months) who were monitored by the pediatric cardiology department for VSD. The mean follow-up period was 32.8±30.3 months (median 20 months).

Results: The VSDs were classified as perimembranous (n=610, 76.4%), muscular (n=171, 21.4%), doubly committed subarterial (n=10, 1.3%), and multiple (n=8, 1%). Spontaneous closure rates were 42.7%, 13.1%, and 25% in muscular, perimembranous, and multiple VSDs, respectively, which corresponded to a mean age of 18.6±19.9 months (median 12 months) in muscular and 30.2±33.7 months (median 14.5 months) in perimembranous VSDs. Before 2 years of age, 78.1% of muscular and 58.6% of perimembranous VSDs underwent spontaneous closure. Of 256 defects (32%) that required surgical closure, 91.4% were of perimembranous location. The mean age at surgery was 38.8±49.1 months (median 11 months) for muscular, and 43.7±40.9 months (median 24 months) for perimembranous defects. During the follow-up period, the following complications were noted: aortic valve prolapse (0.7%), aortic regurgitation (0.6%), left ventricle-to-right atrium shunt (2.6%), subaortic ridge (3.7%), and infundibular stenosis (1.2%). Aortic regurgitation developed in eight patients (3.7%) after surgical closure.

Conclusion: Our data on the natural course and prognosis of VSDs may be of relevance with respect to patients' age, defect type, and complications encountered in the follow-up period.

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