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David P. Bichell
Emile A. Bacha
John E. Mayer
Richard A. Jonas
Pedro J. del Nido
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Ann Thorac Surg 2000;70:115-118
© 2000 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons


Original articles: Cardiovascular

Minimal access approach for the repair of atrial septal defect: the initial 135 patients

David P. Bichell, MDa, Tal Geva, MDa, Emile A. Bacha, MDa, John E. Mayer, MDa, Richard A. Jonas, MDa, Pedro J. del Nido, MDa

a Departments of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Surgery, Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachussetts, USA

Address reprint requests to Dr Bichell, Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Children’s Hospital, 3030 Children’s Way, San Diego, CA 92123

Background. From May 1996 to August 1998 a minimal access approach was used for 135 of 200 consecutive surgical atrial septal defects closures in children through young adults ranging in age from 6 months to 25 years (median 5 years).

Methods. A 3.5- to 5-cm midline incision was centered over the xiphoid with division of the xiphoid alone (transxiphoid) or of the lower sternum (ministernotomy); both groups underwent bicaval venous cannulation through the incision. Cardioplegia and aortic cross-clamping were administered through the incision. Cephalad retraction of the sternum with a fixed-arm retractor aided exposure.

Results. There have been no early or late deaths and no bleeding or wound complications. No procedure required conversion to a full sternotomy, and no cannulation attempt was abandoned for an alternate site. Cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times were equivalent to those in the full sternotomy group. The mean length of hospital stay in the ministernotomy group was 2.7 days.

Conclusions. The closure of atrial septal defects can be performed through a transxiphoid or ministernotomy approach, conferring a satisfactory cosmetic result without compromising the safety or accuracy of the repair.




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