Heart 1998;80:591-595 ( December )
Results of three to 10 year follow up of balloon dilatation of the pulmonary valve
a Division of Pediatric Cardiology, King Faisal
Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, b University of Wisconsin Medical School,
Madison, Wisconsin, USA, c St Louis University School of
Medicine/Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital, St Louis, Missouri,
USA
Correspondence to: Professor P S Rao, Division of Pediatric Cardiology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1465 S Grand Blvd, St Louis, MO 63104-1095, USA.
Accepted for publication 10 July 1998
Background
The results of immediate and short term
follow up of balloon dilatation of the pulmonary valve have been well
documented, but there is limited information on long term follow up.
Objective
To evaluate the results of three to 10 year follow up of balloon dilatation of the pulmonary valve in children
and adolescents.
Setting
Tertiary care centre/university hospital.
Design
Retrospective study.
Methods and results
85 patients (aged between 1 day and 20 years, mean (SD) 7.0 (6.4) years) underwent balloon
dilatation of the pulmonary valve during an 11 year period ending
August 1994. There was a resultant reduction in the peak to peak
gradient from 87 (38) to 26 (22) mm Hg. Immediate surgical
intervention was not required. Residual gradients of 29 (17) mm Hg
were measured by catheterisation (n = 47) and echo Doppler (n = 82)
at intermediate term follow up (two years). When individual results
were scrutinised, nine of 82 patients had restenosis, defined as a
peak gradient of 50 mm Hg or more. Seven of these patients underwent
repeat balloon dilatation of the pulmonary valve: peak gradients were
reduced from 89 (40) to 38 (20) mm Hg. Clinical evaluation and echo
Doppler data of 80 patients showed that residual peak instantaneous
Doppler gradients were 17 (15) mm Hg at long term follow up (three to
10 years, median seven), with evidence for late restenosis in one
patient (1.3%). Surgical intervention was necessary to relieve fixed
infundibular stenosis in three patients and supravalvar pulmonary
stenosis in one. Repeat balloon dilatation was performed to relieve
restenosis in two patients. Actuarial reintervention free rates at one,
two, five, and 10 years were 94%, 89%, 88%, and 84%, respectively. Pulmonary valve regurgitation was noted in 70 of 80 patients at late
follow up, but neither right ventricular dilatation nor paradoxical interventricular septal motion developed.
Conclusions
The results of late follow up of
balloon dilatation of the pulmonary valve are excellent. Repeat balloon
dilatation was performed in 11% of patients and surgical intervention
for subvalvlar or supravalvar stenosis in 5%. Most patients had mild
residual pulmonary regurgitation but right ventricular volume overload
did not develop and surgical intervention was not required. Balloon
dilatation is the treatment of choice in the management of moderate to
severe stenosis of the pulmonary valve. Further follow up studies
should be undertaken to evaluate the significance of residual pulmonary regurgitation.
© 1998 by Heart
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