Covered CP stents may be used as the therapy of choice in patients with complications after CoA repairs, whereas they provide a safe alternative to conventional stenting in patients with severe and complex CoA lesions or advanced age.
Superior vena cava-related symptoms occur in only 50% of patients with hemodynamically significant SVC obstruction. Endovascular therapy is successful in relieving the stenosis and associated symptoms with good long-term results.
Background-Percutaneous cardiac interventions are currently performed under x-ray guidance. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been used to guide intravascular interventions in the past, but mainly in animals. Translation of MR-guided interventions into humans has been limited by the lack of MR-compatible and safe equipment, such as MR guide wires with mechanical characteristics similar to standard guide wires. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a newly developed MR-safe and compatible passive guide wire in aiding MR-guided cardiac interventions in a swine model and describe the 2 first-in-man solely MR-guided interventions. Methods and Results-In the preclinical trial, the new MR-compatible wire aided the performance of 20 interventions in 5 swine. These consisted of balloon dilation of nondiseased pulmonary and aortic valves, aortic arch, and branch pulmonary arteries. After ethics and regulatory authority approval, the 2 first-in-man MR-guided interventions were performed in a child and an adult, both with elements of valvar pulmonary stenosis. Catheter manipulations were monitored with real-time MRI sequence with interactive modification of imaging plane and slice position. Temporal resolution was 11 to 12 frames/s. Catheterization procedure times were 110 and 80 minutes, respectively. Both patients had successful relief of the valvar stenosis and no procedural complications. Conclusions-The described preclinical study and case reports are encouraging that with the availability of the new MR-compatible and safe guide wire, certain percutaneous cardiac interventions will become feasible to perform solely under MR guidance in the future. A clinical trial is underway in our institution. (Circ Cardiovasc Interv. 2010;3:585-592.)
Cardiac output post-Fontan in HLHS at peak stress is blunted due to a limitation in preload which is not responsive to inhaled pulmonary vasodilators in the setting of normal PVR.
Abstract.Owing to their noninvasive nature, coronary artery stents have become popular demand for patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. Late restenosis, in-stent restenosis, and late thrombosis, all mediated by the denuded endothelium, represent the most recurrent failures of vascular stent induction. Higher patency rates of stents can be achieved by restoring the native internal environment of the vessel-an endothelium monolayer. This active organ inhibits the inflammatory reaction to injury responsible for thrombus and intimal hyperplasia, thereby providing a novel therapeutic option to combat the unacceptably high prevalence of restenosis. As the climax of the nanotechnology era approaches, tissue engineering is being explored by means of exploiting the multipotent abilities of stem cells and their adherence to bioactive surface nanocomposite polymers. The endothelium can be reconstructed from neighboring intact endothelium and adherence of circulating endothelium progenitor cells. The latter takes place via a series of signaling events: mobilization, adhesion, chemoattraction, migration, proliferation, and finally their differentiation in mature endothelial cells. A nanotopography surface can orchestrate endothelium formation, attributable to cellular interactions promoted by its nanosize. This review encompasses the prospect of in situ endothelialization, the mechanisms regulating the process, and the advantages of using a new generation of bioactive nanocomposite materials for coating metal stent scaffolds.
In neonates and infants with a shunt-dependent pulmonary circulation, stenosis of the shunt needs to be treated aggressively to prevent a fatal outcome. We report the technique and outcome in seven consecutive neonates and infants with Blalock-Taussig shunt stenosis, who were treated with intraluminal stents. Stenting of classical or modified Blalock-Taussig shunts is technically feasible and can be used as a rescue procedure. Neointimal dissection is less likely compared with balloon angioplasty of the shunt alone.
Aim: The impact of prenatal diagnosis on morbidity and mortality for certain types of congenital heart disease (obstructive left heart lesions and transposition of the great arteries) is well established. No data are available for lesions with duct dependent pulmonary flow. We aimed to assess the impact of prenatal diagnosis of pulmonary atresia on clinical presentation and neonatal outcome. Method: Fifty-eight newborns with pulmonary atresia presenting to our centre were identified retrospectively between 1997 and 2004 (prenatal diagnosis n = 37, postnatal n = 21). Anatomical sub-types included intact ventricular septum (PAIVS, n = 33) and ventricular septal defect (PAVSD, n = 25); those with more complex anatomy were excluded. Results: After adjusting for anatomical sub-type, postnatally diagnosed infants were significantly more hypoxic at presentation (mean oxygen saturation 65% vs 84%). However, they presented early (median age 1 day) and prostaglandin E was initiated promptly (median 3 hours) with rapid improvement of oxygen saturations (interaction p,0.001). This resulted in no appreciable differences in terms of pH, base deficit, blood pressure or heart rate between the groups by the time of the first catheter/surgical intervention. Postnatal infants did not differ in terms of length of intensive care unit (p = 0.18) or hospital stay (p = 0.86), incidence of complications (p = 0.72), or mortality (p = 0.77). Multivariable analysis revealed a positive association between occurrence of complications and both degree of cyanosis at presentation (rather than postnatal diagnosis per se) and anatomy (PAIVS). Conclusion: Postnatal diagnosis of pulmonary atresia is associated with greater cyanosis at presentation. However this does not translate into greater neonatal morbidity or mortality provided that early recognition and prompt initiation of prostaglandin E therapy occur.
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