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Surgical closure of atrial septal defect in children under two years of age. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Infants with atrial septal defects typically show no symptoms, but surgery is often scheduled between ages 2 and 4; however, some do present symptoms early on, leading to debates on treatment.
  • A study covering the years 1994 to 2001 examined the outcomes of surgical closure for 18 infants under 2 years, most of whom were symptomatic, experiencing issues like failure to thrive and respiratory infections.
  • Results showed no deaths and significant post-operative improvements for the majority, suggesting early surgical intervention can be beneficial for symptomatic infants with atrial septal defects.

Article Abstract

Infants with atrial septal defects are seldom symptomatic and usually require elective surgery between 2 and 4 years of age. However a small minority is symptomatic and management at this age has been controversial. This study evaluated surgical closure of atrial septal defect below 2 years of age. Eighteen infants with a mean age of 13.4 +/- 5.7 months were operated on for secundum atrial septal defect from 1994 to 2001. Fourteen patients were symptomatic with failure to thrive in 7 and recurrent respiratory infections in 7, one had increasing cardiomegaly, and 3 were operated on early for social reasons. The defect was isolated in 11 patients (61%) and the other 7 (39%) had minor associated lesions requiring additional procedures such as ductal ligation, direct closure of a tiny ventricular septal defect, and inspection of the mitral valve. There were no early or late deaths. The postoperative course was complicated by pulmonary problems in 4 cases. Of the 16 patients available for follow-up, 14 were asymptomatic and 2 were symptomatically improved. Most showed a dramatic improvement in growth and development. These gratifying results indicate that consideration should be given to early surgical closure of atrial septal defect in symptomatic infants.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/021849230401200404DOI Listing

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