On admission, the patient had hard signs for vascular compromise including neuromotor deficit. The patient was urgently transferred to the operating room. A written informed consent was obtained from each parent. After median laparotomy, the retroperitoneum overlying the RCIA was divided (Figure 2a). After heparinization (1 mg/kg), the CIA was vertically opened. Along with the snare guidewire, the ADO-II was extracted (Figure 2b). Due to the accompanying arterial dissection, the atriotomy was extended distally, until a healthy segment of intima was reached. The length of the segment of dissection was almost 6-cm long, and an end-to-end anastomosis was not possible. Thus, following the proximal and distal embolectomies accompanied by a good antegrade and retrograde blood flow, a 4-mm polytetrafluoroethylene tube graft interposition with internal iliac artery ligation were performed (Figure 2c). The ischemia time was almost three hours. The postoperative course was uneventful.
On echocardiography, the PDA was small (2-mm in diameter), and the left heart chambers were not enlarged. As the patient was asymptomatic with medications, clinical and echocardiographic follow-up was decided. The patient was discharged on postoperative Day 9. She had no signs of ischemia and the graft was patent with triphasic flow pattern at five months of follow-up in the outpatient setting.
Rolland et al.[6] r eported 7 3% s pontaneous PDA closure even in extremely preterm infants. Additionally, from our point of view, due to the increased rate of vascular injury in patients less than one year old,[1,5] p atients w ho a re a symptomatic or in whom the symptoms are under control with medications, it seems beneficial to delay transcatheter PDA closure, until the patient turns at least one-yearold. Our patient was asymptomatic with medications; thus, PDA was not closed surgically in the current admission. Furthermore, at five months of followup in the outpatient setting, the patient was still asymptomatic with a normal growth as for PDA, highlighting the importance of patient selection for transcatheter PDA closure and avoidance of overtreatment with the associated complications.
Along with the studies which compare patency of different grafts, the long-term follow-up of extremity viability and outcomes of vascular reconstruction techniques following pediatric vascular injury are limited, which makes the fate of the bypass grafts uncertain in this patient population.[4,5] Although the graft may be patent for a particular period, outgrowth of the polytetrafluoroethylene graft is the anticipated problem in the near future, which in our opinion, within two or three years. Furthermore, gait disturbances, leg-length discrepancy, claudication, and additional surgical or endovascular interventions would be other morbidities which will be confronted in the long-term period.[5]
In conclusion, transcatheter closure of patent ductus arteriosus seems to be effective and safe in not all but selected cases. This case report highlights the importance of patient selection, importance of the avoidance from insisting on retrieval of the occluder device, and backup of pediatric cardiovascular surgical cover, since although the embolization rate seems to be very low, the outcomes may be devastating including limb loss, death or in the best-case scenario, need for multiple surgical and/or endovascular procedures in the future.
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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Berman DP, et al. Percutaneous Patent Ductus Arteriosus
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