Heart 1998;80:479-483 ( November )
Maintaining tricuspid valve competence in double discordance: a challenge for the paediatric cardiologist
Service de cardiologie pédiatrique,
Hôpital Necker/Enfants-malades, 149 Rue de Sèvres, 75743 Paris
cedex 15, France
Correspondence to: Dr Kachaner.
Accepted for publication 25 March 1998
Objectives
To establish the prevalence of
tricuspid valve abnormalities in children with a double discordant
heart (or congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries);
to study the influence of the loading conditions induced by various
surgical interventions on the right and left ventricle in patients with
double discordance and an abnormal tricuspid valve; and to propose a
rational surgical approach.
Methods
Case notes were reviewed of 141 consecutive patients admitted in the first year of life with various
types of double discordance (intact ventricular septum (group 1),
ventricular septal defect (group 2), ventricular septal defect and
pulmonary obstruction (group 3)). A study group of 62 patients with an
abnormal tricuspid valve was selected by cross sectional
echocardiography. These were followed up through palliative and open
heart procedures with grading of tricuspid regurgitation.
Results
Tricuspid valve abnormalities were
more common in groups 1 and 2 (60% and 56%) than in group 3 (31%).
Preoperative tricuspid regurgitation was more common in group 2 (90%)
than in groups 1 and 3 (38% and 36%). Ten patients in groups 1 and 2 died in the neonatal period with severe tricuspid regurgitation,
associated with coarctation of the aorta in 60%. Eight patients in
group 1 had no surgery and are doing well, with a competent tricuspid valve. Palliative procedures were undertaken in 28 patients: 14 had
pulmonary artery banding, which resulted in a decrease in tricuspid
regurgitation, 12 in group 2 by reducing the pulmonary blood flow and
two in group 1 by changing the septal geometry; 14 in group 3 had an
aortopulmonary shunt, which induced tricuspid regurgitation in two.
Twenty patients are still alive after palliation, with stable tricuspid
valve function. Repair of the tricuspid valve was unsuccessful in the
three patients who underwent conventional surgery, leaving the right
ventricle facing the systemic circulation. In two patients with a
competent but abnormal tricuspid valve, conventional surgery induced
severe tricuspid regurgitation. Of the 15 patients who underwent
conventional surgery, only 10 survived (mortality 33%): eight with a
tricuspid valve prosthesis and two with severe residual tricuspid
regurgitation. However, tricuspid regurgitation decreased after
anatomical correction (nine patients), restoring a systemic left
ventricle and a subpulmonary right ventricle, even when the tricuspid
valve was not repaired (five patients). Eight patients are doing well
after anatomical correction (mortality 11%).
Conclusions
Tricuspid valve function in
double discordance with an abnormal tricuspid valve depends on the
loading conditions of both ventricles and on the septal geometry.
Interventions that increase right ventricular volume or decrease left
ventricular pressure are likely to induce tricuspid regurgitation,
while those that decrease right ventricular volume or increase left
ventricular pressure are likely to improve tricuspid valve function.
Repair of the tricuspid valve always failed when the right ventricle was left in a systemic position and always succeeded when the right
ventricle was placed in a subpulmonary position. These results should
be taken in to account when dealing with patients with double
discordance and an abnormal tricuspid valve.
© 1998 by Heart
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