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Cardiac defibrillation therapy for at risk patients with systemic right ventricular dysfunction secondary to atrial redirection surgery for dextro-transposition of the great arteries

Cardiac defibrillation therapy for at risk patients with systemic right ventricular dysfunction secondary to atrial redirection surgery for dextro-transposition of the great arteries
Cardiac defibrillation therapy for at risk patients with systemic right ventricular dysfunction secondary to atrial redirection surgery for dextro-transposition of the great arteries
AIM: To review techniques of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICD) in patients after Mustard surgery for arterial transposition.
METHODS AND RESULTS: Retrospective analysis of all Mustard patients receiving ICDs at our institution. Five patients (median age 24 years, range 19-35, 3 male) with systemic right ventricular dysfunction (sRV) dysfunction and New York Heart Association (NYHA) II and III, received ICDs. Implantation was performed transvenously in three patients, epicardial patches and subcutaneous arrays at surgery in two patients. Two patients required lead extraction and baffle stent angioplasty before ICD implantation. Defibrillation vectors incorporating the anterior sRV mass [i.e., sub-pulmonary left ventricle (pLV) to generator can, and between epicardial defibrillator patches], consistently achieved a minimum 10 joule(J) safety margin during defibrillation threshold (DFT) testing. Subcutaneous arrays and endocardial vectors that included a superior vena cava (SVC) electrode were less effective. One patient developed pulmonary oedema post-procedure. At a median 20 months, all patients were alive and in NYHA class II. Follow-up over 24 months documented multiple non-sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) in the group and one patient had recurrent VT with aborted device therapy.
CONCLUSION: Defibrillator implantation in Mustard patients is challenging. Sub-optimal defibrillation should be anticipated and can be overcome using vectors which integrate the RV mass and high-energy devices. A staged procedure involving pre-implant interventions or separate DFT tests, where indicated, may be better tolerated by patients.
cardiac surgical procedures, analysis, implantable, surgery, transposition of great vessels, heart atria, adolescent, etiology, ventricular dysfunction, right, adult, case report, risk, review, defibrillators, safety, follow-up studies, adverse effects, male, therapy, research, methods, report, risk factors, humans, female, retrospective studies, heart, physiopathology
1099-5129
281-284
Michael, Kevin A.
6f871ac1-2a55-46d3-a959-72e782925110
Veldtman, Gruschen R.
d9b03375-5c07-46b8-9d85-8ac5b0f8e08a
Paisey, John R.
4d958db6-f32d-4ce7-bef5-003a4a358312
Yue, Arthur M.
4040f8ec-0252-49e0-b838-58f37956acd2
Robinson, Stephen
ba591c98-4380-456a-be8a-c452f992b69b
Allen, Stuart
e8d968db-4cbc-4c0a-9ad7-775e4134f3df
Sunni, Nadia S.
9f7aea8b-a15e-4517-9ed4-6940f90ec0c0
Kiesewetter, Chris
974335b0-459f-4ed3-9b55-8de559c668a9
Salmon, Tony
6bfc5458-fb73-4685-a42f-aff7ae83e23f
Roberts, Paul R.
193431e8-f9d5-48d6-8f62-ed9052b2571d
Morgan, John M.
ac98099e-241d-4551-bc98-709f6dfc8680
Michael, Kevin A.
6f871ac1-2a55-46d3-a959-72e782925110
Veldtman, Gruschen R.
d9b03375-5c07-46b8-9d85-8ac5b0f8e08a
Paisey, John R.
4d958db6-f32d-4ce7-bef5-003a4a358312
Yue, Arthur M.
4040f8ec-0252-49e0-b838-58f37956acd2
Robinson, Stephen
ba591c98-4380-456a-be8a-c452f992b69b
Allen, Stuart
e8d968db-4cbc-4c0a-9ad7-775e4134f3df
Sunni, Nadia S.
9f7aea8b-a15e-4517-9ed4-6940f90ec0c0
Kiesewetter, Chris
974335b0-459f-4ed3-9b55-8de559c668a9
Salmon, Tony
6bfc5458-fb73-4685-a42f-aff7ae83e23f
Roberts, Paul R.
193431e8-f9d5-48d6-8f62-ed9052b2571d
Morgan, John M.
ac98099e-241d-4551-bc98-709f6dfc8680

Michael, Kevin A., Veldtman, Gruschen R., Paisey, John R., Yue, Arthur M., Robinson, Stephen, Allen, Stuart, Sunni, Nadia S., Kiesewetter, Chris, Salmon, Tony, Roberts, Paul R. and Morgan, John M. (2007) Cardiac defibrillation therapy for at risk patients with systemic right ventricular dysfunction secondary to atrial redirection surgery for dextro-transposition of the great arteries. Europace, 9 (5), 281-284. (doi:10.1093/europace/eum001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

AIM: To review techniques of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICD) in patients after Mustard surgery for arterial transposition.
METHODS AND RESULTS: Retrospective analysis of all Mustard patients receiving ICDs at our institution. Five patients (median age 24 years, range 19-35, 3 male) with systemic right ventricular dysfunction (sRV) dysfunction and New York Heart Association (NYHA) II and III, received ICDs. Implantation was performed transvenously in three patients, epicardial patches and subcutaneous arrays at surgery in two patients. Two patients required lead extraction and baffle stent angioplasty before ICD implantation. Defibrillation vectors incorporating the anterior sRV mass [i.e., sub-pulmonary left ventricle (pLV) to generator can, and between epicardial defibrillator patches], consistently achieved a minimum 10 joule(J) safety margin during defibrillation threshold (DFT) testing. Subcutaneous arrays and endocardial vectors that included a superior vena cava (SVC) electrode were less effective. One patient developed pulmonary oedema post-procedure. At a median 20 months, all patients were alive and in NYHA class II. Follow-up over 24 months documented multiple non-sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) in the group and one patient had recurrent VT with aborted device therapy.
CONCLUSION: Defibrillator implantation in Mustard patients is challenging. Sub-optimal defibrillation should be anticipated and can be overcome using vectors which integrate the RV mass and high-energy devices. A staged procedure involving pre-implant interventions or separate DFT tests, where indicated, may be better tolerated by patients.

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More information

Published date: 2007
Keywords: cardiac surgical procedures, analysis, implantable, surgery, transposition of great vessels, heart atria, adolescent, etiology, ventricular dysfunction, right, adult, case report, risk, review, defibrillators, safety, follow-up studies, adverse effects, male, therapy, research, methods, report, risk factors, humans, female, retrospective studies, heart, physiopathology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61368
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61368
ISSN: 1099-5129
PURE UUID: 1f4bce06-14cb-49bd-bb9c-78533dd62e5a
ORCID for Stephen Robinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1766-7269

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Date deposited: 08 Sep 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:26

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Contributors

Author: Kevin A. Michael
Author: Gruschen R. Veldtman
Author: John R. Paisey
Author: Arthur M. Yue
Author: Stephen Robinson ORCID iD
Author: Stuart Allen
Author: Nadia S. Sunni
Author: Chris Kiesewetter
Author: Tony Salmon
Author: Paul R. Roberts
Author: John M. Morgan

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