Minimally Invasive Approach for Mitral Valve Repair in a Patient With Prior Pentalogy of Fallot Repair

2012 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-145
Author(s):  
Pey-Jen Yu ◽  
Aubrey C. Galloway
2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 1471-1476
Author(s):  
Taichi Sakaguchi ◽  
Toshinori Totsugawa ◽  
Akihiro Hayashida ◽  
Masaaki Ryomoto ◽  
Naosumi Sekiya ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 08 (01) ◽  
pp. e37-e40
Author(s):  
Raphael Tasar ◽  
Sophie Tkebuchava ◽  
Mahmoud Diab ◽  
Torsten Doenst

Abstract Background We report the case of minimally invasive mitral valve repair in an 86-year-old female with symptomatic structural mitral regurgitation and severe pectus excavatum. Case Description The case summarizes four areas of repetitive heart team discussions. First, should an 86-year-old patient still be treated invasively? Second, if so, should treatment be interventional or surgical? Third, if surgical, should we replace or repair at that age and fourth which surgical access is best with respect to her chest deformation? Conclusion We chose to surgically repair the valve using a minimally invasive approach. The patient was extubated 3 hours after surgery and discharged after 7 days.


Author(s):  
Faisal H. Cheema ◽  
Stephen Cheung ◽  
Jeffrey Jiang ◽  
Muhammad Jabran Younus ◽  
Harold G. Roberts

The sliding leaflet plasty of the posterior mitral leaflet is a complex procedure, both lengthy and technically challenging. A simple alternative is desirable, particularly for a minimally invasive approach. We report a distinct substitute to the conventional sliding leaflet plasty that included triangular resections of P2 and P3 using a robot. These multiple triangular resections enabled a successful mitral valve repair with satisfactory clinical and echocardiographic results. Recognizing the complexity of sliding leaflet plasties, we note that multisegment triangular resections seem to be an easy, expeditious, and effective alternative for the posterior leaflet that is readily performed via a robotic endoscopic approach.


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 28-30
Author(s):  
Uldis Strazdins ◽  
Gvido Janis Bergs ◽  
Martins Kalejs ◽  
Indra Vilumsone

SummaryMitral regurgitation is common valvular heart disease and a major cause of congestive heart failure and death. It is most often associated with degenerative changes in mitral valve which leads to valve prolapse. Transapical off-pump mitral valve repair is a new minimally invasive procedure to treat mitral regurgitation. Here we report 64-year old female who suffered from grade III mitral regurgitation due to ruptured chorda and posterior leaflet P2/P3 segment prolapse. During surgery 4 artificial chordae were implanted and postoperative echocardiography results showed minimal residual grade I mitral regurgitation, therefore significant clinical improvement can be achieved with minimally invasive approach.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Ivantsits ◽  
Lennart Tautz ◽  
Simon Sündermann ◽  
Isaac Wamala ◽  
Jörg Kempfert ◽  
...  

AbstractMinimally invasive surgery is increasingly utilized for mitral valve repair and replacement. The intervention is performed with an endoscopic field of view on the arrested heart. Extracting the necessary information from the live endoscopic video stream is challenging due to the moving camera position, the high variability of defects, and occlusion of structures by instruments. During such minimally invasive interventions there is no time to segment regions of interest manually. We propose a real-time-capable deep-learning-based approach to detect and segment the relevant anatomical structures and instruments. For the universal deployment of the proposed solution, we evaluate them on pixel accuracy as well as distance measurements of the detected contours. The U-Net, Google’s DeepLab v3, and the Obelisk-Net models are cross-validated, with DeepLab showing superior results in pixel accuracy and distance measurements.


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