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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 58, 972-977, Copyright © 1994 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
JS Tweddell, CE Canter, ND Bridges, S Moorhead, CB Huddleston and TL Spray
We retrospectively analyzed the impact of recipient, donor, and operative
factors on the operative mortality and morbidity of 36 consecutive infant
heart transplantations. Operative survival was excellent at 94%. Among 34
survivors, operative morbidity in 12 patients included acute severe
allograft failure with or without prolonged ventilatory support. The cohort
was characterized by age less than 4 months (32 of 36), a diagnosis of
hypoplastic left heart syndrome (29 of 36), and the use of circulatory
arrest (27 of 36); these variables were colinear and could not be used to
predict operative mortality or morbidity. None of the remaining recipient,
donor, or operative characteristics predicted survival or acute severe
allograft failure. A donor-to-recipient weight ratio greater than 2 and a
circulatory arrest time greater than 39 minutes predicted the need for
prolonged ventilatory support. Despite the need for aggressive or prolonged
support after 12 of 36 transplantations, operative survival was high at 94%
(34 of 36 procedures, 32 of 34 patients). The use of less restrictive donor
criteria combined with aggressive management of acute allograft failure can
result in excellent operative survival after infant heart transplantation.
ARTICLES
Predictors of operative mortality and morbidity after infant heart transplantation
Department of Surgery, St. Louis Children's Hospital, Washington University School of Medicine, Missouri.
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