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Atrial Septal Defect

Atrial Septal Defect. Seoul National University Hospital Department of Thoracic & Cardiovascular Surgery. Atrial Septal Defect. 1. Definition A hole of variable size in the atrial septum. A patent foramen ovale functionally closed is excluded.

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Atrial Septal Defect

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  1. Atrial Septal Defect Seoul National University Hospital Department of Thoracic & Cardiovascular Surgery

  2. Atrial Septal Defect • 1. Definition • A hole of variable size in the atrial septum. • A patent foramen ovale functionally closed is excluded. • Partial anomalous pulmonary venous connections may • occur as isolated lesion or in combination with ASD. • 2. History • Roesler : ASD diagnosed during life in 1934. • Bedford : Diagnosis of ASD clinically in 1941. • Winslow : Description of PAPVC in 1739. • Murray : External suture of ASD in 1948. • Lewis & Taufic : 1st open repair with inflow stasis • and cooling in 1953. • Gibbon : 1st open heart surgery in 1953.

  3. Composition of Atrial Septum • 1. Thick superior portion derived from infolded atrial • roof that forms the secondary atrial septum of the • embryo, this terminates in the superior limbic bands. • 2. Thin lower portion derived from the septum primum • which extends superiorly and to the left of thelimbus. • The lower edge of the septum primum normally fuses • with developing endocardial cushions.

  4. Atrial Septal Defect • Pathophysiology • Atrial septal defects permit left-to-right shunting, increasing pulmonary blood flow. • Over time, the increased pulmonary overcirculation leads pulmonary vascular occlusive disease, pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular failure, and the atrial arrhythmias.

  5. Anatomy of Right Atrium

  6. ASD . Surgical Pathology

  7. Atrial Septal Defect • Types • Fossa ovalis defect (ostium secundum defect) • Posterior defect • Ostium primum defect • Coronary sinus defect • Subcaval defect (sinus venosus defect , superior vena caval defect) • Confluent ASD

  8. Types of Atrial Septal Defect

  9. ASD . Gross Morphology

  10. ASD. Secundum, Large

  11. ASD. Secundum, Multiple

  12. ASD. Secundum

  13. ASD. Sinus Venosus Type

  14. ASD. Sinus Venosus Type

  15. ASD. Sinus Venosus Type

  16. Pericardial Patch ClosureASD. Sinus Venosus Type

  17. Types of PAPVC • 1. Sinus venosus malformation (syndrome) • 2. Right superior pulmonary vein to SVC • without superior caval ASD • 3. Rt. PVs to Rt. atrium with or without ASD • 4. Rt. PVs to IVC (Scimitar syndrome) • 5. Rare connections of Rt. PVs • 6. Anomalous Lt. PV connections • 7. Bilateral partial anomalous PV connection

  18. Pathophysiology of PAPVC • One or more, but not all, all the pulmonary veins drain into the right atrium or its venous tributaries ; ASDs are commonly associated. • This anomaly results in a left-to-right shunt leading to pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary vascular disease, and congestive heart failure if left untreated. • It comprises less than 1% of congenital heart diseases.

  19. 1. Cardiac chamber . Enlarged thick right atrium . Increased diastolic RV . LV dynamic abnormality 2. Mitral valve . Mitral prolapse . Mitral incompetence . Cleft mitral leaflet 3. The lungs . Pulmonary vascular disease . Compress smaller airways 4. Cardiac conditions . All varieties of CHD coexist . Mitral valvar disease . Tricuspid incompetence 5. Other conditions . Marfan . Turner . Noonan . Holt-Oram syndrome . Rarely all these conditions Morphology of Atrial Septal Defect

  20. Clinical Features & Diagnosis • 1. Prevalence • . 10% of CHD • . M : F = 1 : 2 • . Fossa ovalis defect is most common (80%) • 2. Symptoms and signs • . No symptoms & signs when Qp/Qs is less than 1.5 • . Effort breathlessness and respiratory infections • . Active parasternal systolic lift & fixed splitting of S2 • 3. Chest radiography, electrocardiography • 4. Two-dimensional echocardiography • 5. Cardiac catheterization and cineangiography

  21. 1. Survival 5-15% die in 3rd decade Premature death with CHF Rarely paradoxical emboli 2. Pulmonary hypertension 3. Functional status 1% with large ASD have symptoms during 1 year 4. Spontaneous closure Uncommon after 1 year 5. Changes in Qp/Qs with time 6. Rt & Lt ventricular function 7. AV valvar dysfunction 8. Supraventricular arrhythmia AF in adult Sinus node dysfunction 9. Systemic hypertension No definite causes, but increased incidence Natural History of ASD

  22. Changes of Qp/Qs in ASD • Decreasing LV compliance may increase Qp/Qs in patients with ASD during 5th – 6th decades • Systemic arterial hypertension may accelerate this process and unmask an ASD • Most ASDs increase in size & shunt as time passes, as with tendency toward mitral valve prolapse • These increase in shunt with time do not occur when the shunt is from the PAPVC without ASD • Qp/Qs decreases when the pulmonary hypertension develops with decreased RV compliance with RVH

  23. Ventricular Functions in ASD • Right ventricular volume overload and increased RV diastolic dimensions are characteristic, and the ventricular septum is displaced posteriorly and leftward • These features of RV are well tolerated much longer than volume-overloaded LV, volume-overloaded RV by acute tricuspid or pulmonary regurgitation • RV failure eventually occurs, however, with decreased RV ejection fraction and hypokinesia • Most adult patients with large ASD have normal LV systolic dimensions but subnormal diastolic dimensions • Some loss of LV functional reserve is present in most adult patients and in some children & preoperative LV abnormalities by the effects of volume-overloaded RV

  24. Indications for Operation • 1. Uncomplicated ASD or PAPVC, RV volume overload • &Qp/Qs greater than 1.5 in uncomplicated ASD • 2. Scimitar syndrome with severe hypoplasia of Rt lung • and Qp/Qs less than 2 is not an indication. • 3. Isolated PAPVC without ASD, when Qp/Qs is less than • 1.8 is not an indication. • 4. Optimal age is under 5 years of age and also can be • considered to be 1-2 years of age recently. • 5. Pulmonary vascular disease of sufficient severity • (8-12u) is not indicated.

  25. Techniques of Operation • 1. Repair of fossa ovalis type • 2. Repair of posterior ASD • 3. Repair of coronary sinus type • 4. Repair of sinus venosus type • 5. Repair of anomalous PV connections • 6. Repair of mitral or tricuspid valve disease

  26. Primary Closure of ASD

  27. Patch Closure of Secundum ASD

  28. Sinus Venosus Type of ASD

  29. Sinus Venosus Type with PAPVC

  30. Sinus Venosus Type with PAPVC Warden Operation

  31. Warden Operation

  32. Repair of PAPVRConnection Left Pulmonary Vein to Innominate Vein • Anastomosis of left pulmonary vein to left atrial appendage

  33. Perforated Flap-valve Patch

  34. Operation for Scimitar Syndrome • Direct anastomosis of Scimitar vein to LA

  35. Features of Postoperative Care • 1. Convalescence of most patients is uneventful. • 2. Unusually high LA pressure in early after operation • in older patients because of impaired ventricular • function • 3. Incidence of pulmonary & systemic embolization occur, • anticoagulation for 8-12 weeks in old patients • 4. When mitral regurgitation has been underestimated • preoperatively and there are signs of pulmonary • venous hypertension, urgent evaluation & reoperation • for valve is required

  36. Special Situations & Controversies • 1. Closure of ASD by percutaneous technique • 2. Need for cold cardioplegic myocardial protection • 3. Direct suture versus patch repair • Patch closure of large defects to avoid excessive tension • 4. Patch material in the atrial septum • 5. Complicationsof sinus venosus syndrome • Postoperative narrowing due to small size or patch • Compromise of sinus node by suture retraction • Development of junctional rhythm by junctional incision • . V-Y atrioplasty • . Warden operation

  37. Choice of Intraatrial Patch • Autologous pericardium • When a regurgitation jet may strike the patch • When pericardium forms part of the wall of an intracardiac conduit, the precise contour (position) of which is determined by pressure difference • When the patch is sewn to a very delicate area

  38. 1. Survival . Hospital mortality . Time-related survival 2. Modes of death 3. Incremental risk factors for death 1) Pulmonary vascular disease (contraindication more than 6~8 units) 2) Older age at operation 3) Anatomic type 4. Functional status 5. Hemodynamic results 6. Ventricular function 7. Arrhythmic events 8. Thromboembolism 9. Reinterventions Operative Results of ASD

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