29 research outputs found

    Aspect pratique de la surveillance des greffes cardiaques et cardiopulmonaires chez l'enfant.

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    The short and middle term survivors of the 19 transplanted children (heart and heart-lungs) of our program are treated with an association of cyclosporine and azathioprine. The detection of rejection is the main worry and relies on endomyocardial biopsy, but this investigation may be dangerous and lowers the available veins of smaller children. Thus, we use it only for the situations of clinical suspicion (18 times in 20 months in 8 children, which proved rejection 6 times in 3 patients). Renal function supervision is careful and comprises systematic renal biopsy; tubulo-interstitial lesions were constant: minimal 3 times, moderate 3 times. This prompts to prescribe the lowest possible cyclosporine dosages which ensure an effective residual blood level (100-300 ng/ml). In case of heart-lung transplantation (3 cases), pulmonary rejection is difficult to prove, opportunistic infections more frequent and severe, and the tracheal suture is responsible for complications (stenosis in 2 cases). By and large, the constraints of supervision are reasonable and allow an almost normal life

    Remote control of pulmonary blood flow: initial clinical experience

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    OBJECTIVE: After positive experimental results were obtained with the FloWatch-R-PAB (EndoArt S.A., Lausanne, Switzerland), an implantable device for pulmonary artery banding with telemetric control, it was tested in a prospective, multicenter clinical trial. METHODS: From June to September 2002, 6 patients with a mean age of 10.6 months (1-31 months) and a mean weight of 6.5 kg (3.5-11 kg) underwent pulmonary artery banding with the implantation of the FloWatch-R-PAB device through median sternotomy (4 patients) or left thoracotomy (2 patients). The diagnoses were the following: univentricular heart (2 patients), complete atrioventricular septal defect (2 patients), ventricular septal defect (1 patient), and multiple ventricular septal defects with double aortic arch (1 patient). The associated procedures were atrioseptostomy with cardiopulmonary bypass (2 patients), closure of patent ductus arteriosus (2 patients), and division of double aortic arch (1 patient). RESULTS: In a mean follow-up of 7 months (6-9 months), there were no early or late deaths, reoperations, or device-related complications. A mean of 5 regulations per patient (range 2-14) were required to adjust the tightening of the pulmonary artery banding, 50% (15/30) within the first postoperative week, 20% (6/30) during the second week, and 30% (9/30) within 8 months after surgery. In 70% (21/30) of the cases, the regulation was required to further narrow the pulmonary artery, and in 30% (9/30) of the cases, the regulation was required to release the pulmonary artery. CONCLUSIONS: The initial trial confirmed the adequate functioning of the FloWatch-R-PAB device as telemetrically adjustable pulmonary artery banding. Repeated pulmonary artery banding adjustments, dictated by the clinical need in all patients even weeks after surgery, were accomplished without need for reoperation or invasive procedures. In children requiring pulmonary artery banding, the therapeutic strategies can be expanded by this promising technology. This device should be particularly indicated in patients with transposition of the great arteries requiring left ventricular retraining

    Role of CMV pneumonia in the development of obliterative bronchiolitis in heart-lung and double-lung transplant recipients

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    Obliterative bronchiolitis (OB) is the main cause of late mortality after lung transplantation. Cytomegalovirus infection has been associated with late graft failure. The aim of this study was to determine whether the development of OB was related to CMV pretransplant serological status and to CMV infections. The study group comprised 36 lung transplant recipients (27 HLT and 9 DLT) who survived more than 4 months, of whom 47% developed OB (defined by the persistence of an unexplained obstructive disease: FEV1/VC < 0.7). OB occurred more frequently: (1) in seronegative recipients with seropositive donors (8/9) than in seropositive recipients (7/19) or seronegative well-matched recipients (2/8); and (2) in patients who experienced CMV pneumonia (11/16) and CMV recurrence (11/16). Since matching seronegative recipients is the best way to prevent CMV infection, we believe that seronegative grafts must be reserved for seronegative recipients
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