Transposition of the great arteries [S,D,L]. Pathologic anatomy, diagnosis, and surgical management of a newly recognized complex
- PMID: 7564427
- DOI: 10.1016/S0022-5223(95)70092-7
Transposition of the great arteries [S,D,L]. Pathologic anatomy, diagnosis, and surgical management of a newly recognized complex
Abstract
The transposition of the great arteries [S,D,L] complex is delineated for the first time from the anatomic, diagnostic, and surgical standpoints in this study of 26 cases: 16 surgical and 10 postmortem. Transposition of the great arteries with situs solitus of the viscera and atria (S), D-loop ventricles (D), and L-transposition (L) was characterized by six additional interrelated anomalies that largely determined surgical management: (1) ventricular septal defect, usually conoventricular, in 96%; (2) malalignment of the conal septum, typically leftward and posteriorly, in 80%; (3) right ventricular hypoplasia in 50%; (4) pulmonary outflow tract stenosis in 27%; (5) ventricular malposition, such as superoinferior ventricles, in 23%; and (6) absent left coronary ostium resulting in "single" right coronary artery in 23%. Complete surgical repair was done in 81% of the surgical patients with a 12.5% hospital mortality rate and no late deaths. When there was no pulmonary outflow tract stenosis and intracardiac anatomy was uncomplicated, we undertook anatomic repair before 1 month of age. However, when pulmonary outflow tract stenosis coexisted, complete repair was deferred until after age 1 year, our currently preferred operation being the REV procedure (réparation a l'etage ventriculaire). When complex intracardiac anatomy precluded biventricular repair, a palliative procedure was performed in 19% without mortality. Hence, this experience indicates that surgical management of patients with the transposition of the great arteries [S,D,L] complex is feasible.
Comment in
-
Transposition of the great arteries.J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 1996 Jun;111(6):1289-90. doi: 10.1016/s0022-5223(96)70235-0. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 1996. PMID: 8642834 No abstract available.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
