Retrosternal Clots After Fontan Surgery by Systematic Evaluation With Transthoracic Ultrasound

Abstract

Objectives: Bleeding is a common, serious, and often subtle complication after total cavopulmonary connection surgery. The aim of the present study was to assess the incidence of retrosternal clots after surgery, which were searched for systematically with transthoracic ultrasound. Design: Retrospective study. Setting: Single center. Participants: Total cavopulmonary surgeries were reviewed from January 2016 to May 2019. Interventions: Thoracic ultrasound with careful evaluation of the retrosternal area was performed at different postoperative times (12-36 hours, 5-7 days, and before discharge) as completion of routine echocardiography. Measurements and Main Results: Among 37 children undergoing total cavopulmonary connection (mean age 5.5 ± 1.8 years [range 2.4-11.7]; mean body surface area 0.7 ± 0.1 m2 [range 0.3-1.6 m2]), retrosternal clots were detected in 18 (48.6%). Of these, 7 (13.5%) had small clots (1 cm-2-3 cm). Four of the 6 detected large clots required surgical revision, and in the other 2 patients, the clots were not treated because the patients’ conditions were clinically stable. When 3 major groups (group 1—no or small clots, group gropu 2 are small to moderate or moderate, group 3—large clots) were evaluated, no significant differences were noted in age, body surface area, CPB time, conduit type, or the number of previous surgeries. Conclusions: With thoracic ultrasound diagnosis, existence of retrosternal clots was found to be very common after to

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