[Long-term results after surgery of coarctation of the aorta in neonates and children]. 1997

S Di Filippo, and F Sassolas, and A Bozio
Service de Cardiologie C, hôpital cardiovasculaire Louis-Pradel, Lyon-Montchat.

Surgery is the treatment of choice for coarctation of the aorta in childhood. Coarctation presenting in the neonatal period carries a poorer functional and vital prognosis and it may be opposed to the paucisymptomatic forms observed in infants and children. Coarctation in the neonatal period presents with severe cardiac failure and is often associated with hypoplasia of the transverse aorta and/or other complex congenital malformation. Improved neonatal intensive care and the introduction of prostaglandin E1 have considerably reduced the immediate mortality by enabling surgery to be undertaken under the best possible haemodynamic conditions. However, early and late mortality in this group remain significantly higher due to associated cardiac lesions; in this context, the management varies with some groups carrying out surgery in one stage and others in two stages. Despite progress in neonatal surgery and operative techniques to increase the diameter of the transverse aorta, hypoplasia may persist and be a cause of restenosis or secondary hypertension. In this group of coarctations, the main problem is the timing of surgery in order to reduce the risks of restenosis and hypertension to a minimum. Restenosis is diagnosed by clinical examination. Doppler ultrasonography and eventually confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The risk factors for restenosis are young age at surgery, the type of procedure performed and the presence of extensive aortic hypoplasia. Recurrent, localised forms are accessible to percutaneous angioplasty when performed 6 months to 1 year after surgery; extensive restenosis and restenosis in older children should be referred for reoperation. Some subjects become hypertensive in the absence of residual obstruction and, in these cases, MRI should be requested to detect hypoplasia of the aortic arch. However, hypertension may be observed alone or only occur during exercise: late surgery and the length of follow-up seem to be associated with its occurrence. Aortic aneurysms occur after aortoplasty with a patch, a technique which has now be abandoned for this reason. Nevertheless, this risk is also associated with percutaneous angioplasty of restenosis, justifying systematic diagnostic MRI. In summary, coarctation of the aorta in children has a good overall prognosis at medium-term, the neonatal forms having considerably benefited from progress in the management of this condition in the intensive care unit and from advances in surgical technique. However, long-term cardiological follow-up remains necessary to detect the two potential complications: restenosis and hypertension.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D006973 Hypertension Persistently high systemic arterial BLOOD PRESSURE. Based on multiple readings (BLOOD PRESSURE DETERMINATION), hypertension is currently defined as when SYSTOLIC PRESSURE is consistently greater than 140 mm Hg or when DIASTOLIC PRESSURE is consistently 90 mm Hg or more. Blood Pressure, High,Blood Pressures, High,High Blood Pressure,High Blood Pressures
D007223 Infant A child between 1 and 23 months of age. Infants
D007231 Infant, Newborn An infant during the first 28 days after birth. Neonate,Newborns,Infants, Newborn,Neonates,Newborn,Newborn Infant,Newborn Infants
D012008 Recurrence The return of a sign, symptom, or disease after a remission. Recrudescence,Relapse,Recrudescences,Recurrences,Relapses
D012086 Reoperation A repeat operation for the same condition in the same patient due to disease progression or recurrence, or as followup to failed previous surgery. Revision, Joint,Revision, Surgical,Surgery, Repeat,Surgical Revision,Repeat Surgery,Revision Surgery,Joint Revision,Revision Surgeries,Surgery, Revision
D002648 Child A person 6 to 12 years of age. An individual 2 to 5 years old is CHILD, PRESCHOOL. Children
D002675 Child, Preschool A child between the ages of 2 and 5. Children, Preschool,Preschool Child,Preschool Children
D005500 Follow-Up Studies Studies in which individuals or populations are followed to assess the outcome of exposures, procedures, or effects of a characteristic, e.g., occurrence of disease. Followup Studies,Follow Up Studies,Follow-Up Study,Followup Study,Studies, Follow-Up,Studies, Followup,Study, Follow-Up,Study, Followup
D006330 Heart Defects, Congenital Developmental abnormalities involving structures of the heart. These defects are present at birth but may be discovered later in life. Congenital Heart Disease,Heart Abnormalities,Abnormality, Heart,Congenital Heart Defect,Congenital Heart Defects,Defects, Congenital Heart,Heart Defect, Congenital,Heart, Malformation Of,Congenital Heart Diseases,Defect, Congenital Heart,Disease, Congenital Heart,Heart Abnormality,Heart Disease, Congenital,Malformation Of Heart,Malformation Of Hearts
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man

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