Background: The Norwood procedure is the first part of a three-stage surgical palliation for patients with functionally single ventricle anatomy. Complications after the stage I operation are not uncommon. Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) is traditionally the mainstay for evaluation.
Objective: The purpose of our study is to compare gated cardiac computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) with TTE when evaluating for postoperative complications after stage I Norwood procedure and to describe management implications.
Materials And Methods: A retrospective chart review of all patients over a 4-year period who underwent nonelective urgent CCTA for suspected complications related to stage I Norwood procedure was performed. Elective CCTA studies before stage II palliation were excluded. Patient demographics, CCTA and TTE findings, as well as interventions performed, were recorded.
Results: Thirty-four patients were included. The mean age at CCTA was 63 days (range: 4-210 days). All patients had a recent TTE with a mean time interval between TTE and CCTA of 2 days. CCTA detected 56 abnormalities in 30 patients, with 23 directly related to postsurgical complications, including shunt-related complications (10/23, 43%), Damus-Kaye-Stansel anastomotic narrowing (2/23, 9%) and neo-aortic arch/branch vessel abnormalities (11/23, 48%). These complications were managed as follows: surgery (9, 39%), catheter-based intervention (7, 30%), medical (4, 17%) and no change in management (3, 13%). TTE did not detect 8/23 (35%) findings found on CCTA, of which 75% were either managed with surgery (4/8, 50%) or catheter-based intervention (2/8, 25%).
Conclusion: CCTA plays an important role in detecting surgical complications after stage I Norwood procedure and demonstrates additional findings that have direct management implications.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00247-021-04966-4 | DOI Listing |
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