Balloon Angioplasty For Native Coarctation of the Aorta in Infants

  • O. Borodinova Ukrainian Children’s Cardiac Center (Kyiv)
  • A. Maksymenko Ukrainian Children’s Cardiac Center (Kyiv)
  • Y. Kuzmenko Ukrainian Children’s Cardiac Center (Kyiv)
  • A. Kurkevych Ukrainian Children’s Cardiac Center (Kyiv)
Keywords: coarctation of the aorta, balloon angioplasty of the aorta, infants

Abstract

The issue about BAA options in neonates and infants with native CoA is controversal due to the higher rate of reinterventions (50–83%) in comparison with alternative surgical method. Evaluation of the effectiveness of balloon angioplasty and the rate of recurrent coarctation in infants depending on the age of patients at the time of operation are performed in the article.

The research was performed on the data of 267 consecutive infants who underwent balloon angioplasty for native coarctation at our clinic from January 2007 to December 2014, 116 of these patients were critically ill. The average age of patients was 2,24±2,3 months Hospital mortality rate was 0,7%. Despite good immediate results in 260 patients, risk of reinterventions after BAA in infants is about 57.3%. BAA in infants is radical in 42.7% of cases and allows to postpone cardiac surgery by an average of 88,6±60,7 days. Patients under the age of 2 months have the greatest risk of reinterventions – about 62,3– 64.2% of cases.

BAA is a safe and effective method for treatment infants with CoA with good immediate results. BAA is a safe alternative effective method for treatment infants with CoA over 2 months with relatively low level of reinterventions (about 31–39%).

References

1. Arpan R D., Syamasundar R. Coarctation of Aorta-Management Options and Decision Making / Arpan R D., Syamasundar R. // Pediat Therapeut. – 2012. – S5.

2. Mavroudis C., Backer C.L., Pediatric Cardiac Surgery ed.4 – Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2013. – 256 p.

3. Kirklin/ Barratt-Boyes Cardiac Surgery. – 2004. – Vol. 2. – P. 1321–1352.

4. Andrew C. Fiore, MD, Laurice K. Fischer, MS, Theresa Schwartz, MS. Comparison of Angioplasty and Surgery for Neonatal Aortic Coarctation // Ann Thorac Surg. – 2005. – Vol. 80.– P. 1659–65.

5. Rao P. S., Jureidini S. B., Balfour I. C., Singh G. K., Chen S. C. Severe aortic coarctation in infants less than 3 months: successful palliation by balloon angioplasty // J Invasive Cardiol. – 2003 Apr. – Vol.15 (4). – P. 202–8.

6. Celoria G. C., Patton R. B. Congenital absence of the aortic arch // Am Heart J. – 1959. – Vol. 58. – P. 407–13.

7. Lababidi Z. Neonatal transluminal balloon coarctation angioplasty. Am Heart J. – 1983. – Vol. 106. – P. 752–3.

8. Witsenburg M., The S. H., Bogers A. J., Hess J. Balloon angioplasty for aortic recoarctation in children: initial and follow up results and midterm effect on blood pressure / Witsenburg M., The S. H., Bogers A. J., Hess J. // Br Heart J. – 1993. – Vol. 70. – P. 170–4.

9. Rao P. S., Chopra P. S., Koscik R., Smith P. A. Surgical versus balloon therapy for aortic coarctation in infants =3 months old. / Rao P. S., Chopra P. S., Koscik R., Smith P. A. / J Am Coll Cardiol. – 1994. – Vol. 23. – P. 1479–83.
Published
2016-12-02
How to Cite
Borodinova, O., Maksymenko, A., Kuzmenko, Y., & Kurkevych, A. (2016). Balloon Angioplasty For Native Coarctation of the Aorta in Infants. Ukrainian Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery, (3 (26), 62-66. Retrieved from https://cvs.org.ua/index.php/ujcvs/article/view/203
Section
CONGENITAL HEART DEFECTS