The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Patients with congenital aortic stenosis are subject to sudden death without prior symptoms. Indications for operation are based on pressure gradients, but intraoperative evaluation of results after relief of obstruction can be subjective and arbitrary. Between September, 1981, and October, 1983, 21 patients underwent operation for relief of congenital aortic stenosis. ⋯ Immediate reexploration and incision of the rudimentary commissure in 2 and excision of redundant valvular tissue in the other resulted in a more satisfactory pressure gradient without substantial aortic insufficiency. We suggest that measurement of intraoperative pressure gradients can accurately assess the results of therapy and allow the surgeon the option of reexploration for further intervention. Moreover, the high correlation between intraoperative and postoperative pressure gradients can help in planning postoperative management and future cardiac catheterizations.
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Sixty-four consecutive patients with penetrating cardiac injuries were treated between January, 1977, and January, 1983, at the University of Maryland Hospital. Twenty-eight patients had major associated injuries of other organs. The patients were divided into groups according to their clinical status on arrival. ⋯ None of the survivors sustained severe neurological sequelae. Five patients underwent late reoperations for closure of a ventricular septal defect (2), mitral valve replacement (1), and pericardiectomy (2) with no deaths. Though repair of penetrating cardiac injuries should preferably be carried out in the OR, immediate thoracotomy for "lifeless" or deteriorating patients can be performed in the ER with a low incidence of direct surgical complications and with high patient survival.