• Title/Summary/Keyword: mitral stenosis

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Annular Constrictive Pericarditis: Simulating Vavular Heart Disease : Case Report (윤상 교약성 심낭염의 외과적 치료 -2예 보고-)

  • 유회성
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.280-284
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    • 1980
  • This is report of two cases of annular constrictive pericarditis. Since January 1959 to December 1979 the authors experienced 48 cases of chronic constrictive pericarditis treated surgically at the Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, the National Medical Center in Seoul. These cases simulated valvular heart disease. One case, as mitral stenosis, revealed rumbling apical diastolic murmur [II/VI], atrial fibrillation and right ventricular hypertrophy pattern on E.C.G., the other, as infundibular pulmonic stenosis, presented pressure gradient between right ventricle and main pulmonary artery at infundibular level of 76 mmHg in systole. Both patients underwent operation successfully and one of them was assisted by E.C.C. during pericardiectomy and result was excellent. It is difficult to make the diagnosis of these conditions preoperatively so consideration about these might be important to make the diagnosis accurately.

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Modified Anatomic Repair of Corrected Transposition of the Great Arteries with Ventricular Septal Defect and Pulmonary Outflow Obstruction (심실중격결손과 폐동맥유출로 협착을 동반한 교정형 대혈관전위증의 해부학적 교정수술)

  • 박계현
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.24 no.11
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    • pp.1149-1153
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    • 1991
  • A modified procedure for the operative management of the corrected transposition of the great arteries with ventricular septal defect and pulmonary stenosis or atresia was performed in 4 patients. (age ; 18 months-9 years). The operation consists of a venous switch procedure (Senning), intraventricular baffling directing the blood flow from the morphologic left ventricle into the aorta via ventricular septal defect through the right ventriculotomy, and insertion of valved conduit between the morphologic right ventricle and the pulmonary artery. All the four patients had large non-restrictive ventriular septal defects and no evidence of significant mitral valve regurgitation. Both ventricles were well-developed. Three cases had pulmonary atresia, and the remainder had severe subpulmonic stenosis. Postperatively, all patients showed no findings of systemic or pulmonary venous obstruction withnormal sinus rhythm. One patient died of sepsis due to infection by Methicillin-resistant S. aureus on the thirteenth postoperative day. Follow-up is done on the survivors, and all of them are dong well with regular sinus rhythm, with their functional class I or II at 2 to 8 months after the operation.

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The Comparison of Cardiac Outputs between Impedance Cardiography and Thermobilution Technique (임피던스 카디오그래피와 열희석법에 의한 심박출량의 비교)

  • 김덕원;이웅구
    • Journal of Biomedical Engineering Research
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.165-170
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    • 1988
  • The purpose of this study was to prove the accuracy of impedance cardiography by measuring cardiac outputs of patients simultaneously by thermodilution method, and impedance cardiography developed in our department. The subjects were eight patients with mitral stenosis admitted to the cathete rization laboratory in Severance Hospital. The correlation coefficient was 0.895, which is thought quite high considering the fact that accuracy of cardiac outputs of patients with valvular diseases measured by both methods was known to be low.

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Surgical Treatment of Discrete Subaortic Stenosis (대동맥판막하 막상협착증의 수술요법)

  • No, Jun-Ryang;Lee, Jae-Won
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.19 no.1
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    • pp.165-173
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    • 1986
  • During the 4 year period from 1982 through 1985, twelve patients have undergone operations for discrete subaortic stenosis with good short-term clinical result at Department of Thoracic and cardiovascular Surgery, S.N.U.H. According to the cineangiographic and operative findings, nine of the 12 patients were classified as Deutsch type I, the other 3 as type II, and eleven of the 12 had one or more associated anomalies of the cardiovascular system such as PDA[5], VSD[5], left SVC[2], MS[1], COA[1], supramitral membrane[1], DORY[1], right aortic arch[1], DCRV[1], and TOF[1] [one with Shone`s complex], and three of them had secondary cardiac disorders such as aortic regurgitation[3],mitral regurgitation[2], and tunnel shaped dynamic obstruction of left ventricular outflow tract[2]. We have performed membrane resection via oblique aortotomy with retraction of the aortic cusps in 7 cases and via VSD from right cardiac chamber in 5 cases with large VSD and have also performed the operations on the correctable associated anomalies. There was only one operative death in patient with associated TOF due to neurologic complication and no other postoperative difficulties except in one patient with transient heart block resolved spontaneously on postoperative 3rd day. To our knowledge, this article is the first report of operation for discrete subaortic stenosis in Korean literature.

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Changes in Pulmonary Function in Mitral Valve Disease Following Mitral Valve Replacement (승모판질환에서 승모판치환술에 따른 폐기능의 변화)

  • 이응배;김덕실
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.29 no.9
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    • pp.951-958
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    • 1996
  • Bet een November 1991 and December 1993, twelve patients (Male: 2, Female: 10) who had mitral valve disease without primary pulmonary disease underwent mitral valve replacement. The pulmonary function test (PFT) was performed preoperatively and postoperatively (mean, 9 months after operation). Mitral valve replacement was indicated for mitral stenosis in 9 patients and for mitral insufficiency in 3 patients. Preoperative WHh functional class were 111 in 11 patients and class rV in 1 patient. Postoperatively, ten patients (83 %) were classified into NYHA functional class 1. There was a significant decrease in cardiothoracic ratio (CTR) postoperatively (p< 0.05). The pulmonary function before operation was low compared with predicted values in vital capacity (VC) and forced mid-expiratory flow (FEF 25∼75 %). The FEF 25%-75% and maximal voluntary ventilation (MW) were low compared with predicted values postoperatively. There was no significant difference in the pulmonary function before an after op- eration. Twelve patients were divided into 2 groups according to the early postoperative NYHA functional class. In class I group, the postoperative pulmonary function was significantly improved in 6 parameters (RV, FRC, TLC, FEVI , FEVI /FVC, and FEF 25∼75%), but in class ll group, there was no significant change in the pulmonary function after operation.

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Serial Echocardiographic analysis of Left ventricular function before and after operation in mitral Valve disease (승모판막질환 환자의 수술전후 심에코상의 좌심실기능 변화에 관한 고찰)

  • Park, Pyo-Won;Lee, Yung-Kyoon
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.53-60
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    • 1982
  • M-mode echocardiographic studies of left ventricular function in mitral valve disease were evaluated in 19 surgically treated patients before and one year after operation (mean 12.7 months). Twelve patients had mitral stenosis (MS) and seven patients had mitral regurgitation (MR). Before surgery, average end-diastolic and end systolic dimensions (EDD, and ESD) and left atrial dimension were significantly greater than normal in subject with MR. After surgery, EDD fell significantly from $66.5{\pm}8.4$ (SD)mm to $52.7{\pm}6.3$mm (P 0.01) at the time of late follow up study; ESD fell significantly from $46.5{\pm}9.7$mm to $36.4{\pm}8.6$ (P 0.05) on early follow up study; left atrial dimension fell significantly from $60.5{\pm}6.8$mm to $48.1{\pm}7.2$mm (P 0.01) at the time of the late follow up study. In patients with MS, EDD and ESD were normal and did not change significantly at any time after surgery. The left ventricular ejection fraction (E.F.) was normal in both groups. preoperatively([MR: $64.2{\pm}15.1$, MS: $65.7{\pm}12.3$). After surgery, E.F. did not change significantly at any time after surgery in both groups, but de-creased from $64.2{\pm}15.1$% to $59.5{\pm}11.2$% in MR patients at the time of early follow up study.

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The Norwood Operation in Infants with Complex Congenital Heart Disease (복잡 선천성 심기형 환자에서의 Norwood 술식)

  • 박정준;김용진
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.30 no.3
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    • pp.263-269
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    • 1997
  • From April 1987 to May 1996, 13 infants underwent a Norwood operation for complex congenital heart diseases including hypoplastic left heart syndrome (n : 7), mitral stenosis with small VSD and subaortic stenosis (n : 1), mitral atresia with ventricular septal defect, coarctation of aorta, and subaortic stenosis (n = 1), interrupted aortic arch with ventricular septal defect and subaortic stenosis (n : 1), tricuspid atresia with transposition of the great arteries (n = 1), and complex double-inlet left ventricle (n : 2). All patients without hypoplastic left heart syndrome were associated wit hypoplasia of ascending aorta and arch. Age at operation ranged from 3 days to 8.7 months (mean 60.6 $\pm$ 71.6 days, median 39 days). The operative mortality( < 30 days) was 46% (6 patients). Late mortality was 15% (2 patients). All operative deaths occured during the Erst 24 hours after the operation as a result of cardiopulmonary bypass weaning failure (5 patients) and sudden hemodynamic instability postoperatively (1 patient). Late death was due to aspiration pneumonia in two cases. There are 5 long-term survivals (39%). Three of them have undergone a two-stage repair with a modified Fontan operation in two and total cavopulmonary shunt in one at 12, 17, 4.5 months after Norwood procedure with no mortality. Two patients have entered a three-stage repair strategy by undergoing a bidirectional cavopulmonary shunt at 3 and 5.5 months after initial operation with 1 operative death. The actuarial survival rate for all patients at the first-stage operation, including hospital deaths and ate death was 30.8% at 1 year. In conclusion, the operative mortality of Norwood operation was relatively high compared to other operation for major cardiac anomalies, continuing experience will lead to an improvement in result.

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A False Diagnosis of Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome in a Fetus (태아기에 좌심형성부전증후군으로 잘못 진단되었던 1례)

  • Shin, Youn Jeong;Jang, Sung Hee;Choi, Jung Yun;Han, Eun Sook
    • Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
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    • v.45 no.2
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    • pp.267-272
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    • 2002
  • Typical hypoplastic left heart syndrome(HLHS) is a distinct pathologic entity with aortic atresia, mitral atresia, very hypoplastic or absent left ventricle and thread like ascending aorta. Occasionally, the lesser degree of hypoplasia is found and is called hypoplastic left heart complex(HLHC) by some authors. This HLHC is often associated with critical aortic stenosis. Fetal echocardiography has enabled us to observe human fetal heart in-utero and to diagnose congenital heart disease prenatally over the last 20 years. The diagnosis of HLHS in fetal echocardiography is based on 2-dimensional echocardio -graphic evidence of a diminutive ascending aorta, aortic atresia, mitral atresia or severe stenosis and a hypoplastic left ventricle. Abnormal flow direction through atrial septum or through isthmus greatly aids the diagnosis. This report shows a fetal case who showed hypoplastic left side chambers and retrograde isthmic flow and was diagnosed with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. After birth, although the baby had tachy-dyspnea for the first 3 weeks, she finally recovered without any intervention and showed catch up growth of left side chambers. This case illustrates the extreme difficulty of assessing left ventricle in a fetus.

Epicardial Repair of Acute Atrioventricular Groove Disruption Complicating Mitral Valve Replacement - A case report - (승모판막치환술 후 발생한 급성 제1형 좌심실 파열에 대한 심외막적 봉합 - 1예 보고 -)

  • Cho, Kwang-Ree;Kang, Jae-Geul;Jin, Sung-Hoon
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.40 no.12
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    • pp.855-858
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    • 2007
  • A left ventricular rupture might be one of the most disastrous complications after a mitral valve replacement. An acute atrioventricular groove rupture (type I) was detected in a 54-year-old female diagnosed with a mitral stenosis combined with severe tricuspid regurgitation. She had a prior medical history of an open mitral commissurotomy in Japan at 30 years ago. The surgical findings suggested that the previous procedure was not a simple commissurotomy but a commissurotomy combined with a posteromedial annuloplasty procedure. After a successful mitral valve replacement and a measured (De Vega type) tricuspid annuloplasty, the weaning from a cardiopulmonary bypass was uneventful. However, copious intraoperative bleeding from the posterior wall was detected and the cardiopulmonary bypass was restarted. Exposure of the posterior wall of the left ventricle showed bleeding from the atrioventricular groove 3 cm lateral to the left atrial auricle. Under the impression of a Type I left ventricular rupture, epicardial repair (primary repair of the Teflon felt pledgetted suture, continuous sealing suture using auto-pericardial patch and application of fibrin-sealant) was attempted. Successful local control was made and the patient recovered uneventfully. The patient was discharged at 14 postoperative days without complications. We report this successful epicardial repair of an acute type I left ventricular rupture after mitral valve replacement.