The Annals of thoracic surgery
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The purpose of this report is to analyze preoperative and perioperative factors affecting operative mortality and cardiopulmonary morbidity after a completion pneumonectomy. ⋯ Multiple factors adversely affect operative mortality and cardiopulmonary morbidity after completion pneumonectomy. Although completion pneumonectomy remains a high-risk procedure, especially for benign disease, it still should be considered a treatment option in selected patients.
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Comparative Study
Aortic root replacement with cryopreserved allograft for prosthetic valve endocarditis.
BACKGROUND Our strategy has been to treat aortic prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) with radical debridement of infected tissue and aortic root replacement with a cryopreserved aortic allograft. This study examines the effectiveness of this strategy on hospital mortality and morbidity, recurrent endocarditis, and survival. ⋯ A strategy of radical debridement and aortic root replacement with a cryopreserved aortic allograft for aortic PVE is safe, effective, and recommended.
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The infant with a single ventricle and excessive pulmonary blood flow requires early protection of the pulmonary vascular bed to insure suitability for a subsequent Fontan procedure. The traditional approach, pulmonary artery banding, has had disappointing results. We have pursued an alternate strategy: division of the pulmonary artery, and placement of a systemic-to-pulmonary artery shunt. Potential sites of systemic outflow tract obstruction are simultaneously bypassed, by either a Damus-Kaye-Stansel, or modified Norwood procedure. ⋯ In patients with a functional single ventricle and excessive pulmonary flow, a strategy of pulmonary artery division and shunt, along with prophylactic bypass of systemic outflow obstruction, carries low operative and midterm mortality. It provides consistent protection of the pulmonary vascular bed, avoids subaortic stenosis and aortic arch obstruction, minimizes neoaortic insufficiency, and ensures suitability for progression along a Fontan pathway. These results provide a comparison for alternate strategies, including pulmonary artery banding.
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A bidirectional cavopulmonary shunt has been performed for the high-risk Fontan patient. It is well known that in the presence of the bidirectional cavopulmonary shunt alone to secure pulmonary blood flow, the central pulmonary artery size decreases over time. We have performed pulsatile bidirectional cavopulmonary shunt (PBCPS), keeping pulmonary blood flow from the ventricle through the stenotic pulmonary valve, or a Blalock-Taussig shunt in patients who do not meet the criteria for the Fontan operation. ⋯ The PBCPS is useful for high-risk Fontan patients not only in the staged Fontan operation, but also as definitive palliation.