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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 99, 451-459, Copyright © 1990 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
RL Geggel, JE Mayer Jr, R Fried, H Helgason, EF Cook and LM Reid
Fifty-six patients undergoing a modified Fontan procedure from 1977 to 1985
had lung tissue available from the perioperative period (n = 51) or recent
palliative procedure (n = 5) (37 biopsy, 12 autopsy, 7 biopsy and autopsy).
Twenty-six patients had tricuspid atresia, and 30 had other causes of
functional univentricular heart. Pulmonary arterial structure was
classified by both the Heath-Edwards and morphometric scales. Biopsy and
autopsy grades were identical except for a minor difference in
Heath-Edwards scale in one case. Elevated preoperative mean pulmonary
artery pressure (greater than 15 mm Hg) was associated with medial
hypertrophy (p = 0.04), although six patients with normal pulmonary artery
pressure had medial hypertrophy and six patients with mean pulmonary artery
pressure greater than 15 mm Hg did not have medial hypertrophy. Medial
hypertrophy was a possible risk factor in patients with univentricular
heart: Patients with medial hypertrophy had a ninefold greater risk of
death (p = 0.08). Controlling for confounding variables did not alter this
result (0.06 less than or equal to p less than or equal to 0.10). Medial
hypertrophy was not a risk factor for death in patients with tricuspid
atresia: Four had this feature and each survived. Four patients with
tricuspid atresia died and none had medial hypertrophy. A mean
transpulmonary pressure gradient was measured on the first postoperative
day in 45 patients. In patients with medial hypertrophy there was a trend
toward a higher gradient (p = 0.13). All patients with medial hypertrophy
who had this measurement (n = 9) had a transpulmonary pressure gradient of
7 mm Hg or greater, whereas this was true in only 18 of 36 without medial
hypertrophy (p = 0.007). On the basis of an evaluation of medial
hypertrophy, we conclude that biopsy does not aid in selection of patients
with tricuspid atresia for a Fontan procedure; its role in patients with
univentricular heart is uncertain.
ARTICLES
Role of lung biopsy in patients undergoing a modified Fontan procedure
Department of Pathology, Children's Hospital Center, Boston, Mass.
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