2,691 research outputs found
A Papillary Fibroelastoma of the Tricuspid Valve
Primary cardiac tumours are rare in children. Of these, papillary fibroelastomas are unusual but benign, usually being found in adults. There are only sporadic cases reported in children. We diagnosed such a papillary fibroelastoma involving the tricuspid valve in an asymptomatic child during a routine cardiac investigation
Uncommon Multicystic Lesion of the Interventricular Septum in a 7-Year-Old Boy: Unusual Presentation of an Intracardiac Teratoma
Intracardiac teratomas are very rare primary cardiac tumors; only a few cases have been reported. We present the case of a 7-year-old boy who early in life showed pulmonary stenosis and needed percutaneous and surgical procedures, including sectioning of the right ventricular bands and reconstruction of the right ventricular outflow tract. At the age of 7 years the patient received a diagnosis of a multilobular cystic mass in the right ventricle adherent to the interventricular septum, which was not present at birth. Successful surgical resection was performed. Histologic examination revealed a mature teratoma. We emphasize the differential diagnosis of teratomas in cystic lesions of the interventricular septum
Exercise-Induced Intraventricular Obstruction in a Child with Near Syncope and Chest Pain During Exercise
We report the case of a 10-year-old girl with two episodes of light-headedness and chest pain during exercise. She had an unremarkable clinical record, physical examination, ECG, and echocardiogram. Noninvasive ischemia tests were positive, but coronary angiography was normal. Exercise stress echocardiogram revealed an exercise-induced intra-left-ventricular obstruction with a peak gradient of 78 mmHg and replicated her symptoms. After starting beta-blocker therapy her clinical status improved and no residual obstruction was detected. The authors review this unsuspected clinical condition, seldom reported in the adult population and, to our knowledge, never before in a child
Initial Use of Endothelial Progenitor Cells Capturing Stents in Paediatric Congenital Heart Disease
INTRODUCTION:
Stenosis, mediated by neointimal hyperplasia and thrombosis, is a major limiting factor in successful stent implantation. The introduction of a stent, coated in its endoluminal surface by antihuman CD34 antibodies with endothelial progenitor cell-capturing properties, opens the possibility of promoting a rapid and normal functioning coverage by endothelium and thus avoids both an excessive cell proliferation within stent and the need for long-term dual antiplatelet therapy. These stents, developed for adult coronary artery disease, have not yet been implanted in children or in those with congenital heart disease.
OBJECTIVE AND METHODS:
In this paper, we describe the implantation of Genous® stents in three children with cyanotic congenital heart disease and obstructed systemic-to-pulmonary shunts. We describe the use of this stent and address its potential feasibility in paediatric congenital heart disease.
RESULTS:
To maintain the patency of two modified Blalock-Taussig shunts and one ductus arteriosus, four Genous® stents were implanted in three infants with cyanotic heart disease. All procedures were immediately successful, with resolution of stenosis and improvement in transcutaneous oxygen saturation from 66% ± 3.6% to 92% ± 2.6%. In the follow-up, one stent had no occlusion; however, the remaining two had partial occlusion after 5 and 5.5 months, which were successfully managed with balloon dilatation preceding elective definitive surgical correction.
CONCLUSION:
In our preliminary experience, we demonstrated that Genous® stent implantation was feasible in infants with complex congenital heart disease. Additional studies with larger samples and longer follow-up are required to confirm the potential benefits of this technology in this clinical setting.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Miocardiopatia em Dentes de Serra: uma Causa Rara de Insuficiência Cardíaca
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Aneurismas Gigantes do Septo Interauricular Simulando Massas Quísticas. Dois Casos com Opções Terapêuticas Diferentes
With the recent technical improvement in echocardiography imaging (second harmonics) the number of interatrial septum aneurysms (ASA) increased and are easily recognized. We assist to an overdiagnosing number of cases and diagnostic criteria emerged to face this problem. In the great majority of the cases ASA are small and inoffensive, but as ASA is considered a risk factor for cardioembolism when associated with persistence of foramen oval (PFO), an examination by transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) for exclusion of PFO makes the sense and is a common testing in patients with cryptogenic stroke. Besides these frequent ASA, other forms exist; the authors describe two cases of uncommon and huge ASA, one mimicking a right atrial tumor and the other a quistic, hipoechoic mass. The first case was associated with mitral stenosis and was submitted to surgery and the second was closed with an Amplatzer occluder device usually used in atrial septal defect (ASD)
Aortopulmonary Window. Experience of Eleven Cases
A janela aorto-pulmonar consiste numa
comunicação entre a aorta ascendente e o
tronco da artéria pulmonar, na presença das
duas válvulas arteriais separadas. É uma
anomalia rara que ocorre em cerca de 0,1% a
0,2% de todas as cardiopatias congénitas.
O objectivo deste trabalho é avaliar a forma de apresentação clínica, o tratamento cirúrgico e a evolução dos doentes com janela aorto-pulmonar assistidos num centro terciário de cardiologia pediátrica num período de 30 anos.
Identificaram-se onze crianças consecutivas
com o diagnóstico de janela aorto-pulmonar.
Dez crianças tinham o defeito do tipo proximal e uma do tipo distal. A idade na primeira avaliação variou entre três dias e 13 anos(média=44,5±63,3 meses; mediana=três
meses). A ecocardiografia permitiu fazer o
diagnóstico correcto nos quatro doentes mais
recentes.
Sete doentes foram submetidos a encerramento
da janela aorto-pulmonar por via trans-aórtica e três doentes foram submetidos a laqueação da janela aorto-pulmonar. Simultaneamente, foram corrigidas anomalias associadas significativas em três doentes: correcção de interrupção do arco aórtico em dois doentes; encerramento de comunicação interventricular e alargamento do tracto de saída do ventrículo direito com remendo de Dacron, num doente.
Um doente teve seguimento médico por
apresentar hipertensão pulmonar fixa.
A mortalidade operatória foi de 10% (1/10) e
não se verificou mortalidade tardia.
O tempo médio de seguimento foi de 10±4,9
anos. Actualmente os nove doentes operados
sobreviventes estão assintomáticos, sem qualquer medicação, sem defeitos residuais e
sem evidência de hipertensão pulmonar.
Em conclusão, a evolução das técnicas de
diagnóstico e de tratamento cirúrgico da janela aorto-pulmonar nos últimos anos permite uma intervenção precoce com bons resultados clínicos
Vascular Function Long Term After Kawasaki Disease: Another Piece of the Puzzle?
BACKGROUND:
Kawasaki disease is an acute systemic vasculitis. Cardiac complications are frequent and include endothelial dysfunction in patients with coronary anomalies. Thus far, endothelial dysfunction in patients with no coronary lesions is poorly understood. Our aim was to access the vascular function in adolescents and young adults long term after Kawasaki disease, but without coronary aneurysms or any other cardiac risk factors.
METHODS:
We carried out a single-centre prospective study in a Portuguese population. We evaluated two groups of subjects: (1) Kawasaki disease patients over 11 years of age, diagnosed >5 years ago, with no coronary lesions or any other risk factors for cardiovascular disease; (2) control group of individuals without cardiovascular risk factors. Patients and controls were clinically assessed. Endo-PAT and carotid intima-media thickness assessment were performed to determine vascular function.
RESULTS:
In total, 43 Kawasaki disease patients were assessed and compared with 43 controls. Kawasaki disease patients presented a decreased reactive hyperaemia index compared with controls (1.59±0.45 versus 1.98±0.41; p<0.001). Augmentation index was similar in both groups (-4.5±7 versus -5±9%; p 0.6). The mean carotid intima-media thickness was not significantly increased in the Kawasaki disease group. There were no statistically significant changes with regard to laboratory data.
CONCLUSIONS:
Children with Kawasaki disease may have long-term sequelae, even when there is no discernible coronary artery involvement in the acute stage of the disease. Further research is needed to assess whether known strategies to improve endothelial function would bring potential benefits to Kawasaki disease patients.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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