Methods: Medical data of 27 consecutive patients (18 boys, 9 girls; mean age 9.9+1.7 days; range 1 to 26 days) who undergoing aortic arch and intracardiac repair between March 2007 and April 2012 were retrospectively analyzed. The link between perioperative risk factors and 30-day mortality following surgery were investigated.
Results: The mean body weight of patients were 3.2±0.9 kg. Major associated cardiac defects were present in 12 and included truncus arteriosus (Vaan Pragh type 4) (n=2), transposition of the great arteries (n=5), double outlet right ventricle with Taussing Bing anomaly (n=2), and aortopulmonary window defect (n=3). Renal insufficiency and dialysis were statistically significantly associated with mortality [Chi square 27 (p=0.000) and 20.66 (p=0.000), respectively].
Conclusion: Aortic arch repair with simultaneous intracardiac surgical repair can be done with selective antegrade cerebral perfusion at a single stage in neonates and infants.
Table 1: Demographic and diagnostic properties of the patients
The clinical characteristics included a simple ventricular septal defect (VSD), either with or without an atrial septal defect (ASD), in 15 patients. In addition, major associated cardiac defects were present in 12 patients, with two having truncus arteriosus (Vaan Pragh type 4), five having transposition of the great arteries (TGA), two having double outlet right ventricle (DORV) with the Taussig Bing anomaly, and three having an aortopulmonary window. Furthermore, 16 patients had AoCo, eight had AoCo with a hypoplastic arch, and three had an interrupted aortic arch. The surgery was performed mainly by four surgeons and their associates, and the study was approved by the hospital institutional ethics committee.
The following prognostic risk factors were used to determine postoperative 30-day morbidity and mortality: (i) p reoperative p arameters such as age, height, weight, gender, BSA, renal failure, and congestive heart failure), (ii) intraoperative parameters such as cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) time, aortic cross-clamp (ACC) time, and SACP time, and (iii) postoperative parameters such as cardiac and renal failure, the use of peritoneal dialysis, postoperative permanent and temporary neurological dysfunction, treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU), and length of in-hospital stay.
All of the infants who underwent elective surgery underwent a preoperative evaluation made up of electrocardiography, chest radiography, echocardiography, and routine blood tests for major surgical procedures. Other than for emergency procedures, each patient had their preoperative evaluation one day prior to the surgery, and in the operating room, the patients had intravenous access placement prior to the standard anesthesia for induction. The equipment used during routine monitoring included three-lead electrocardiography, a central venous catheter, invasive right radial artery monitoring, pulse oximetry, blood gas values, and esophageal temperatures. Furthermore, all of the patients were premedicated with intramuscular ketamine 5 mg/kg, midazolam 0.1 mg/kg, and atropine 0.02 mg/kg. Induction of anesthesia was performed via midazolam 0.1-0.2 mg/kg, fentanyl 8-10 mcg/kg, and ropivacaine 0.6 mg/kg, and after the tracheal intubation, it was maintained with midazolam 0.04 mg/kg/h, fentanyl 5-8 mcg/kg/h, and ropivacaine 0.2 mg/kg every half an hour. An additional volatile anesthetic (sevoflurane 1-2%) was provided during the surgical procedure, and dopamine, dobutamine, milrinone, and epinephrine were ordered for the patients based on dose micrograms per kilogram per minute (mcg/kg/min). Conventional ultrafiltration was also performed before weaning from CPB.
A median sternotomy was used in all surgical procedures, and the thymus was totally excised. The aortic arch with its branches and ducts was then dissected and visualized, and the descending thoracic aorta was totally mobilized without sacrificing the intercostal arteries. Next, the neck vessels were mobilized and looped, and elastic snares were passed around them. Alpha-stat acid-base management was employed for all of the patients as well. During cooling, the descending thoracic aorta was completely mobilized to achieve a tension-free anastomosis, with great care being taken not to damage the recurrent laryngeal nerve. When the esophageal temperature reached 28 °C, the neck vessels were snared down to initiate SACP. After completion of the aortic anastomosis, a needle was inserted into the proximal part of the aortic arch for de-airing, and once the flow in the aorta was established, the neck vessel snares were released.
When AoCo occurred, the arterial cannula was inserted into the lateral side of the distal ascending aorta with a 6F or 8F a DLP® pediatric one piece arterial cannula (Medtronic, Inc, Minneapolis, MN, USA) The patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) had been ligated and divided routinely at the initial phase of CPB. The coarcted aortic segment was then proximally and distally clamped and excised, and an end-to-end anastomosis was completed with a 7/0 polypropylene continuous suture.
For repair of AoCo with a hypoplastic arch, the arterial cannula was inserted into the lateral side of the distal ascending aorta (close to the innominate artery). In cases where the distal ascending aorta was not sufficient for cannulation, direct innominate artery cannulation was done with a 6F DLP® pediatric one piece arterial cannula ( Medtronic, Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA). Next, SACP was established by inserting and snaring the aortic cannula into the innominate artery through the ascending aorta, and the left subclavian and left common carotid arteries were also looped and snared. Afterwards, a longitudinal incision was made along the undersurface of the arch, and the arch reconstruction was completed with a 7/0 polypropylene continuous suture after the coarcted segment and ductal tissue were excised (Figure 1).
Figure 1: Repair of a coarctation with a hypoplastic arch.
Just as an interrupted aortic arch where the lower body perfusion depends on the ductus, when we encountered ductal-dependent circulation, both the right and left pulmonary arteries were looped and snared before CPB was performed. The two primary arterial cannulation sites were the brachiocephalic and main pulmonary artery. The cannulas were then Y-connected, CPB was started, and cooling was initiated. A clamp was then placed on the distal arch, and SACP was established in the same manner that was previously described. After the pulmonary artery cannula was removed, the PDA was divided and resected, and the aortic anastomosis was performed.
For the duration of SACP, the pump flows were reduced between 50 and 100 mL kg-1 min-1 to maintain the right radial artery pressure at 40-60 mmHg and avoid cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome. Following the completion of the aortic arch reconstruction, adequate de-airing was completed, the neck vessel snares were released, the aortic cannula was reposed into the aortic arch, and the flows were increased to normal levels (150-200 mL kg-1 min-1). For the duration of the aortic arch reconstruction and intracardiac repair, antegrade blood cardioplesia was given at 20-minute intervals, and the left ventricle was vented through the interatrial incision. Under cardioplegic arrest, the required intracardiac repairs were then performed.
Statistical analysis
The SPSS version 16.0 for Windows statistical
program (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, U.S.A.) was used
for all analyses, and the categorical variables between
the groups were analyzed by using a chi-square test.
For each continuous variable, normality was checked
via the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, and comparisons
between groups were carried out using a one-way
independent samples t-test for normally distributed
data. In addition, discriminate analysis was used
to evaluate any associations between mortality and
prognostic risk factors, with mortality being accepted
as the dependent variable. A p value of 0.000 suggested
that the observed counts are significantly different than what we expected, with a p value of <0.05 being
statistically significant.
Table 2: Peroperative continuous variables of the patients
For predicting the perioperative mortality with these parameters, mortality was a dependent variable while the other variables (ACC, SACP, CBP, ICU, BSA, weight, operation age, length of in-hospital stay) were independent. Discriminate analysis was used to determine the effect that these variables had on mortality, and this showed a 0.78 probability of mortality when in the patients were in the ICU. Furthermore, the probability of mortality was 0.569 during CBP, 0.481 during ACC, 0.372 during SACP, and 0.405 during the in-hospital stay. Hence, the perioperative factors that affected mortality in order of importance were length of ICU stay, CPB time, ACC time, length of in-hospital stay, and SACP time, whereas those with the lowest probability of mortality were BSA (0.336), weight (0.308), and age at time of surgery (0.264). Thus, we can speculate that younger age, lower body weight, and lower BSA had a negative effect on survival.
All of the five patients who had renal insufficiency died after surgery, so the non-continuous parameters of renal insufficiency and dialysis were not included in our discriminant function. However, these two factors were tested using a chi-square test for statistical significance regarding mortality, and the values were 27 (p=0.000) and 20.66 (p=0.000), respectively.
In our study group, we only had two patients whose mortality could not be predicted by discriminant function analysis. One of them was a newborn who was brought to the hospital on the first day of his life who was diagnosed with truncus arteriosus (type II), AoCo, and VSD. He underwent an operation on the sixth day and had elapsed times of 200 minutes, 175 minutes, and 47 minutes for the CPB, ACC, and SACP, respectively. After the surgery, the patient had low cardiac output followed by renal insufficiency. Peritoneal dialysis was initiated, but he died on the postoperative 11th day. This patient was predicted to live according to our discriminant function. The second patient was supposed to die according to our analysis. He was also a one-day-old baby who weighed 2,850 g and had been diagnosed with DORV, TGA, AoCo, and VSD. He underwent surgery on the seventh day and had an elapsed CBP time of 190 minutes along with an ACC time of 168 minutes and SACP time of 48 minutes. He stayed in the ICU for 17 days and was discharged from the hospital on the postoperative 28th day.
Five patients died after their operation in the ICU, two of whom had been diagnosed with AoCo and TGA. Both had long CPB, ACC, and SACP times and died due to low cardiac output within the first 24 hours. The third patient was diagnosed with AoCo and VSD and suffered from a fever after spending three days in the ICU. He died due to sepsis. The fourth patient had a preoperative diagnosis of DORV and AoCo as well as preoperative congestive heart failure. This baby weighed 2,750 g at surgery and had necrotizing enterocolitis after the initiation of feeding via a nasogastric tube, postoperatively. The fifth patient had been diagnosed with DORV, TGA, AoCo, and VSD. This baby also had a coronary anomaly, discovered during surgery, in which all of the coronary arteries were originating from a single orifice. Although the baby was not injured during the operation, he had low cardiac output and died three weeks later. All five of these patients had renal insufficiency, and four underwent peritoneal dialysis in the ICU.
Table 3: Perioperative characteristics of the deceased patients
The SACP technique for single-stage total arch repair has been successfully used in neonates and infants in our clinic, and we have seen no postoperative permanent or temporary neurological dysfunction. Therefore, we can speculate that the perfusion strategy for an aortic arch anomaly using the continuous cerebral perfusion technique has minimized the neurological complications. The mortality rate of our study was higher than other previously published series,[1,2] but this might have been due to the complex conditions associated with our patients and the steep learning curve.
Hypothermic circulatory arrest may induce neurological complications, and deep hypothermia is suspected of being responsible for the generalized inflammatory reaction tissue damage on the brain, the lung capillary leak syndrome, and coagulopathy. Hence, deep hypothermia should be combined with a higher degree of hemodilution to counteract the increased fluid viscosity and cell membrane rigidity, which subsequently reduces the blood’s oxygen carrying capacity.[5] Recent studies have shown the superiority of brain protection associated with higher hematocrit levels.[6] During hypoplasic aortic arch surgery, the main concern is protecting cerebral and myocardial functions. We believe that when SACP is carried out, there is no longer a need for deep hypothermia. Thus, a moderate grade of hypothermia with a mild degree of hemodilution might prove to be effective in protecting other organs from ischemic damage and would also optimize the cerebral oxygen supply. Even though deep HCA provides significant protection from brain damage, it may be associated with transient cerebral dysfunction and delayed psychomotor development. Since the adverse effects of HCA during arch repair have previously been described,[2,3] the current trend is to avoid it whenever possible.
In addition to the neurological adverse effects of HCA, low cardiac output states can persist after coarctation and hypoplastic aortic arch repair as a result of CPB time and preoperative left ventricular dysfunction. For this reason, some centers prefer to perform the isolated myocardial perfusion technique to minimize myocardial ischemia during total circulatory arrest.[7] Nearly one decade ago, at echnique was described in which extended aortic arch anastomosis was used in conjunction with selective cerebral perfusion and a working beating heart.[8] Afterwards, Lim et al.,[9] described a combined perfusion technique that used two cannulas, with one being placed into the innominate artery and the other into the aortic root. By this method, an extended end-to-side anastomosis was performed with continuous cerebral perfusion and a nonworking beating heart.
In this study, we used an innominate artery perfusion technique for cerebral protection in the patients who underwent extended aortic arch reconstruction, and brain perfusion was done through the right innominate artery to avoid the neurological complications associated with the circulatory arrest method.[10] We believe that the use of this method reduced the risk of cerebral edema due to the higher arterial blood flow during SACP because it involves careful monitoring of the right radial artery pressure and near-infrared spectroscopy.[11] The appropriate perfusion rate for the brain in neonates during selective cerebral perfusion remains controversial. An ideal flow rate of between 50 and 100 ml kg-1 min-1 has been advocated on t he basis of theoretical calculations, but many different protocols have been proposed.[12,13] T his u ncertainty r egarding the optimum cerebral flow and management of SACP has prompted surgeons to utilize control systems such as transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (USG) and near-infrared spectroscopy to evaluate the effectiveness of cerebral perfusion.[14] In our experience, the use radial arterial pressure has proven to be a simple and reliable method for adjusting the flow rate during SACP. In our study populations, there was no evidence of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome, and a flow rate of between 50 and 100 mL kg-1 min-1 was used to maintain a perfusion pressure of between 40 and 60 mmHg on the radial artery. Therefore, we hypothesize that the pressure in the radial artery is related to cerebral blood flow and not the flow rate.[15]
In conclusion, for infants who are scheduled to undergo aortic arch repair with concomitant intracardiac surgical repair, surgery can be safely performed via selective cerebral perfusion at a single stage.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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