Surgical repair of pectus excavatum relieves right heart chamber compression and improves cardiac output in adult patients—an intraoperative transesophageal echocardiographic study

2015 ◽  
Vol 210 (6) ◽  
pp. 1118-1125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chieh-Ju Chao ◽  
Dawn E. Jaroszewski ◽  
Preetham N. Kumar ◽  
MennatAllah M. Ewais ◽  
Christopher P. Appleton ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Remi Neviere ◽  
David Montaigne ◽  
Lotfi Benhamed ◽  
Michele Catto ◽  
Jean Louis Edme ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Silvia Fiorelli ◽  
Gelsomina Capua ◽  
Cecilia Menna ◽  
Claudio Andreetti ◽  
Elisabetta Giorni ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Pectus excavatum (PE), a congenital deformity of the chest wall, can lead to cardiac compression and related symptoms. PE surgical repair can improve cardiac function. Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) has been successfully employed to assess intraoperative hemodynamic variations in patients undergoing PE repair. FloTrac/Vigileo™ system (Edwards Life-sciences Irvine, CA) (FT/V) is a minimally invasive cardiac output monitoring system. This retrospective study aimed to assess hemodynamic changes in surgical repair of PE using FT/V and concordance with parameters measured by TEE. Results N=19 patients submitted to PE repair via Ravitch or Nuss technique were enrolled. Intraoperative cardiac assessments simultaneously obtained via TEE and FT/V system were investigated. The agreement between TEE-derived cardiac output (CO-TEE) and FT/V system parameter (COAP) was evaluated. The relationship between COTEE and COAP was analyzed for all data using linear regression analysis. A significant correlation between COAP and COTEE values (R = 0.65, p < 0.001) was found. Bland-Altman analysis of COAP and COTEE showed a bias of 0.13 L/min and a limit of agreement of − 2.33 to 2.58 L/min, with a percentage error of 48%. Intraoperative measurements by TEE and FT/V both showed a significant increase in CO after surgical correction of PE (p < 0.005). Conclusions FT/V system compared to TEE in hemodynamic monitoring during PE surgery yielded clinically unacceptable results due to a high percentage error. After surgical correction of PE, CO, measured by TEE and FT/V, significantly improved.


Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 132 (suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chieh-Ju Chao ◽  
Michael B Gotway ◽  
Dawn E Jaroszewski ◽  
Steven Lester ◽  
Samuel Unzek ◽  
...  

Background: Pectus excavatum (PE) deformity involves posterior depression of the sternum and adjacent costal cartilages. The relationship of CT/MRI chest cardiac compression indices used as indications for surgical repair of PE with echocardiographic findings and with improvement in cardiac chamber compression and function post PE repair is unknown. Methods: We evaluated right atrial (RA) size, tricuspid annulus (TA size, right ventricular (RV) outflow tract size as well as RV 2D strain on intra-operative trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE) immediately pre and post surgical PE repair. Inspiratory and expiratory Haller Index (HI) and cardiac compression indices (CCI) were measured on pre op CT/MR scans (Figure). Offline measurement of chamber dimensions on TEE images was performed and Speckle tracking strain measurements were made using Syngo US Workplace software (Siemens). P<0.05 was considered significant. Results: 60 patients, 73% male, 27% female, age 33.6±10.3 yrs underwent PE repair following CT/MRI from 2010-2014 (Figure). There was a strong correlation between expiratory CT/MRI chest AP diameter and pre-op RA size (panel A). Pre op RA and TA compression on TEE inversely correlated with pre op RV global longitudinal strain rate(RVGLSR) (panels B & C). CCI predicted improvement in RA size post PE repair (panels D & E). In addition pre op RA size on TEE correlated with improvement in RVGLSR post PE repair surgery (panel F). Conclusion: In patients with PE deformity, pre surgical CCI correlated with right-sided cardiac chamber compression on pre op TEE. Severity of chest and cardiac compression also predicted magnitude of improvement in right-sided chamber size and RV longitudinal deformation post PE repair. Our findings provide insight regarding the beneficial effects of PE surgery on right heart chamber compression and improvement in RV function and the important role of intraoperative TEE for patients undergoing PE repair surgery.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Pereira ◽  
J.G Santos ◽  
M.J Loureiro ◽  
F Ferreira ◽  
A.R Almeida ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Thermodilution (TD) and indirect Fick (IF) methods are widely used to measure cardiac output (CO). They are often used interchangeably to make critical clinical decisions, yet few studies have compared these approaches concerning agreement and comparative prognostic value as applied in medical practice. Purpose To assess agreement between TD and IF methods and to compare how well these methods predict mortality. Methods Retrospective cohort study including all consecutive right heart catheterizations performed in a referral pulmonary hypertension (PH) centre from 2010 to 2018. Cardiac index (CI) was calculated by indexed CO to body surface area. PH was classified according to the new definition of the 6st World Symposium on Pulmonary Hypertension 2018 [mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) &gt;20 mmHg]. Patients with cardiac or extra-cardiac shunts or significant (moderate to severe or severe) tricuspid regurgitation were excluded. All-cause mortality over 1 year after right heart catheterization was recorded. Logistic regression was used to identify predictors of the adverse event. Results From a total of 569 procedures, 424 fulfilled the inclusion criteria: mean age 56.7±15.4 years, 67.3% female. Haemodynamic parameters were diagnosed of PH in 86.2% of cases: mPAP 35.3±15.3 mmHg, 83.6% pre-capillary subtype, 42.9% belonging to group 4 (chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension) and 26.6% to group 1 (pulmonary arterial hypertension). Mean values of CO and CI were, respectively, 4.5±2.8 L/min and 2.5±0.8 L/min/m2 measured by TD and 4.6±2.4 L/min and 2.6±1.3 L/min/m2 measured by IF method. There was a median difference (IF minus TD) of - 0.03 / min to CO and - 0.05 L/min/m2 to CI but both meausres correlated only modestly (r=0.6 to TD and r=0.5 to IF). One-year all-cause mortality rate was 5.4% (median time to death was 50.5 days). Lower values of CO and CI assessed by TD were significantly associated with all-cause mortality occurrence (CO TD: 4.5±1.3 L/min versus 3.6±1.0 L/min, p&lt;0.01; CI TD: 2.6±0.7 L/min/m2 versus 2.1±0.4 L/min/m2, p&lt;0.01). No association was observed between CO (p=0.31) and CI (p=0.42) measured by IF method and the adverse event. Logistic regression identified 2 independent predictors of all-cause mortality: TD CO (OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.38–0.79, p&lt;0.01) and TD CI (OR 0.34, 95% CI 0.17–0.67, p&lt;0.01). Similar results were obtained when patients diagnosed with PH were independently analyzed. Conclusions There is only modest agreement between TD and IF CO and CI estimates. Despite being more time-consuming, TD measurements were predictors of all-cause mortality and present a highest prognostic value. These findings favored their used over IF in clinical practice. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None


2016 ◽  
Vol 102 (3) ◽  
pp. 993-1003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dawn E. Jaroszewski ◽  
MennatAllah M. Ewais ◽  
Chieh-Ju Chao ◽  
Michael B. Gotway ◽  
Jesse J. Lackey ◽  
...  

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