Results of unifocalization for pulmonary atresia, ventricular septal defect and major aortopulmonary collateral arteries: patency of pulmonary vascular segments. 1996
Unifocalization, a surgical technique to unifocalize the pulmonary blood supply in patients with pulmonary atresia, ventricular septal defect and major aortopulmonary collateral arteries, is a useful preparative operation to extend the indication for corrective surgery. The preoperative and postoperative pulmonary angiograms of 51 patients (aged 3 months-26 years at first unifocalization, 29 males, 22 females), who underwent a total of 96 unifocalizations from December 1985 to July 1994, were studied to assess the effectiveness of each procedure of unifocalization. The procedures of unifocalization were ligation (9), angioplasty (6), direct anastomosis (25), bridging (6), additional central pulmonary artery creation (9), central pulmonary artery creation (36) and thrombectomy (5). Altogether 125 anastomoses were made, and the patency of 101 (80.2%) anastomoses was confirmed, 24 (19.2%) were shown to be occluded. The patency rate of the anastomoses between xenograft rolls and intrapulmonary arteries was 79.5% (70/88), while that between native central pulmonary arteries and intrapulmonary arteries was 83.8% (31/37; N. S.). The patency rate of the anastomoses involving intrahilar arteries was 88.0% (44/50), while that for the group involving extrahilar arteries only was 71.9% (46/64; P < 0.05). It is concluded that 1) unifocalization with the reconstruction of central pulmonary arteries using a pericardial roll is a useful method for patients with absent or hypoplastic central pulmonary arteries, 2) it is preferable to divide the fissures of lung in anastomosing pulmonary arteries of arborization abnormalities.