Anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery was diagnosed in an infant girl who had evidence of transmural myocardial infarction of the free wall of the left ventricle. At age 13 months, she underwent a palliative left Vineberg implant, and remained asymptomatic until she was 8 years of age. At that time, she underwent suturing of the left coronary ostium for obliteration of the left coronary shunt at the pulmonary artery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTotal surgical correction of a Taussig-Bing type double outlet right ventricle (DORV) was successfully performed in a severely cyanotic 3-year-old girl. The malformation was associated with bilateral conus, d-transposition of the great arteries, d-loop, and a subpulmonary ventricular septal defect (VSD) without significant pulmonary stenosis in situs solitus. It was impossible to create a tunnel repair by resecting the markedly hypertrophied muscular conus that separated the aortic valve from the subpulmonary ventricular septal defect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFifteen patients having total occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery were studied. All fifteen had normal left ventricular anterior walls. The electrocardiogram was normal in eight patients; old inferior wall infarction was evident in one; anterior ischemia in five; and left anterior hemiblock in one.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 51-year-old male with acute fulminating pulmonary edema and cardiogenic shock secondary to severe mitral insufficiency from dislodgment of the disc occluder in a Wada-Cutter valve was treated by immediate open heart procedure with a Bjork-Shiley mitral valve replacement. The patient survived and remains well. This is the second patient reported to survive operation and replacement of a malfunctioning prosthetic mitral valve from which the poppet escaped and embolized.
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