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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 103, 52-59, Copyright © 1992 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
FS Idriss, AJ Muster, MH Paul, CL Backer and C Mavroudis
In a 10-year review, patients operated on for ventricular septal defect and
tricuspid valve pouch were divided into two groups, because the effect of
the tricuspid valve pouch is influenced by which ventricle has the higher
pressure. Group I comprised patients with ventricular septal defect without
transposition of the great arteries and group II, ventricular septal defect
with transposition. In 72 of 392 group I patients, the septal tricuspid
valve leaflet was incised to expose the edges of the hidden ventricular
septal defect to accomplish proper anatomic repair. Forty-eight patients
had a tricuspid valve pouch, the diagnosis being established by
angiography, echocardiography, or at operation. Ages at operation ranged
from 5 months to 22 years and the pulmonary-systemic flow ratio ranged from
1 to 3.4, with 16 being less than 1.5. In one patient the pouch produced a
40 mm Hg pressure gradient in the right ventricular outflow tract. At
operation, through a transatrial approach, the tricuspid valve pouch was
opened radially, the actual ventricular septal defect patched, and the
tricuspid valve leaflet repaired. There were no deaths, no significant
intraoperative or postoperative morbidity, and no tricuspid valve
dysfunction. The average postoperative hospital stay was 4.8 days. In group
II, six of 83 patients operated on for transposition with ventricular
septal defect had significant left ventricular outflow tract obstruction
from the tricuspid valve pouch. Five of six had a Mustard procedure, two
requiring a left ventricular-pulmonary artery conduit, and in two of the
six the ventricular septal defect was closed through the pulmonary artery.
One patient had heart transplantation after a Mustard repair and tricuspid
valve replacement. The sixth patient in group II had a successful arterial
switch at 9 years of age, after the presence of left ventricular outflow
tract obstruction was proved to be due to the pouch. The presence of a
tricuspid valve pouch in group I may lead the surgeon to close false small
openings produced by the pouch rather than the actual ventricular septal
defect. Incising the pouch is safe and essential for proper exposure and
secure closure of the true defect. In group II, the systemic right
ventricular pressure can push the pouch into the left ventricular outflow
tract, causing significant obstruction, and may contribute to tricuspid
valve insufficiency after atrial baffle repair. Arterial switch is
preferred because it returns the obstructive tricuspid valve pouch and
abnormal tricuspid leaflet to the lower pressure pulmonic right ventricle.
ARTICLES
Ventricular septal defect with tricuspid pouch with and without transposition. Anatomic and surgical considerations
Division of Cardiovascular-Thoracic Surgery, Children's Memorial Hospital, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Ill 60614.
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