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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 105, 142-146, Copyright © 1993 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
T Akiba, R Neirotti and AE Becker
The study was initiated by reports on right ventricular outflow tract
obstruction in complete transposition of the great arteries after an
arterial switch repair. We investigated 39 heart specimens with native,
unoperated transposition of the great arteries. Of these, 14 hearts had a
ventricular septal defect; 25 had an intact ventricular septum. In each
heart specimen the narrowest site of the subaortic outflow tract was
measured and compared with the circumference of the aortic orifice.
Obstruction was considered to be present if the outflow tract circumference
was less than that of the aortic orifice. In addition, the diameter of the
ascending aorta immediately above the level of the valve orifices was
measured and compared with that of the pulmonary trunk. An obstruction was
present in the subaortic right ventricular outflow tract of two hearts
(5.1%): one of the obstructions, in a neonatal heart with intact
ventricular septum, was caused by a prominent supraventricular crest and
anterior trabeculations; the other obstruction was an additional extensive
muscular hypertrophy, in the heart of a 13-year-old patient with a similar
anatomy, and a septal defect. A mismatch between the diameters of the
ascending aorta and the pulmonary trunk was present in 15 of 32 hearts
measured. Our observations and a review of the literature confirm that
subvalvular right ventricular outflow tract obstruction in hearts with
native transposition of the great arteries is infrequent. Nevertheless, the
anatomic characteristics of the right ventricular outflow tract are such
that the tract is intrinsically narrow and muscular hypertrophy may easily
lead to obstruction. After an arterial switch operation, subvalvular
obstruction could be caused by dynamic processes analogous to those
observed after relief of isolated pulmonary valve stenosis. Anatomic
subvalvular obstruction could be due to either an obstruction that was not
identified before operation or (a purely speculative hypothesis) subtle
degrees of mismatch in size between the proximal aorta and the pulmonary
trunk, which may be considered irrelevant at time of operation but may also
set into pace a process of ongoing adaptive infundibular hypertrophy.
ARTICLES
Is there an anatomic basis for subvalvular right ventricular outflow tract obstruction after an arterial switch repair for complete transposition? A morphometric study and review
Department of Cardiovascular Pathology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
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