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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Tharakan, Jagan Mohan"

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    Long-term functional assessment after correction of tetralogy of Fallot in adulthood
    (ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2007)
    Background. Tetralogy of Fallot presenting in adulthood is a surgical challenge. We present the long-term outcomes of surgical correction in this subset of patients, including results of postoperative effort tolerance as assessed by treadmill testing.Methods. Fifty-eight patients older than 18 years operated on between January 1995 and June 2004 are included in the study. Mean age at surgery was 22.5 +/- 5 years. Forty-seven patients were in New York Heart Association functional class II and 11 were in class III. Two patients had previous shunts. Forty-four patients received a transannular patch, and 14 had a right ventricular outflow tract patch. The prospective arm objectively assessed postoperative ventricular function by treadmill testing and echocardiography.Results. Hospital mortality was 6.9%. Follow-up was 89% complete, with mean follow-up of 69.9 +/- 43 months. Late mortality occurred in 2 patients, both with infective endocarditis. Significant improvement in functional class was demonstrated (p < 0.001). Eight patients had significant pulmonary regurgitation on follow-up. The probability of survival after repair was 89% at 15 years. Thirty-five of 36 patients who underwent treadmill testing had good effort tolerance, with an average of 10.47 +/- 1.4 metabolic equivalents achieved. None had a positive result. One patient with transannular patch, in functional class III, had fair exercise tolerance with severe pulmonary regurgitation on echocardiography.Conclusions. Repair of adult tetralogy of Fallot has acceptable morbidity and mortality rates with good long-term surgical outcome in terms of effort tolerance as demonstrated by treadmill testing. Transannular patching does not appear to be a significant risk factor for right ventricular failure at long-term follow-up.
  • Item
    Right ventricular pacing via left superior vena cava.
    (Indian heart journal, 2004)
    Negotiating the pacing lead into the right ventricle via left superior vena cava, at times, can be difficult. We report two such cases in which pacing leads were introduced into the right ventricle via left superior vena cava, with the help of stylet tip shaped into a large pigtail loop.
  • Item
    Trans-catheter closure of atrial septal defect: Balloon sizing or no Balloon sizing - single centre experience.
    (Annals of pediatric cardiology, 2011)
    BACKGROUND: Selecting the device size using a sizing balloon could oversize the ostium secundum atrial septal defect (OSASD) with floppy margins and at times may lead to complications. Identifying the firm margins using trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE) and selecting appropriate-sized device optimizes ASD device closure. This retrospective study was undertaken to document the safety and feasibility of device closure without balloon sizing the defect.METHODS: Sixty-one consecutive patients who underwent trans-catheter closure of OSASD guided by balloon sizing of the defect and intra procedural fluoroscopy (group I) and 67 consecutive patients in whom TEE was used for defect sizing and as intraprocedural imaging during device deployment (group II) were compared. The procedural success rate, device characteristics, and complications were compared between the two groups.RESULTS: The procedure was successful in 79.7 % patients. The success rate in group II (60 of 67, 89.6%) was significantly higher than in group I (41 of 61, 67.2 %) (P = 0.002). Mean upsizing of ASD device was significantly lower in group II (P < 0.001). TEE also provided better success rate with smaller device in subjects with large ASD (>25 mm) and in those who were younger than 14 years of age. There were four cases of device embolization (two in each group); of which one died in group II despite successful surgical retrieval.CONCLUSION: Balloon sizing may not be essential for successful ASD device closure. TEE-guided sizing of ASD and device deployment provides better success rate with relatively smaller sized device.
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