AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at using a special access point in the arm (axillary artery) for heart procedures in kids with heart problems from January 2019 to February 2023.
  • The researchers treated 30 babies and kids, mostly under 1 year old, and performed various heart surgeries using this method with some having to come back for more treatments later.
  • The results show that this technique is safe and can help doctors perform important heart procedures on young patients more effectively.

Article Abstract

Background: Axillary arterial access (AAA) in pediatric heart catheterizations is undervalued.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed children with congenital heart diseases (CHDs) who received trans-axillary arterial catheterizations between January 2019 and February 2023. We aimed ultrasound-guided punctures in the proximal two-thirds of axillary arteries with diameters ≥2 mm to insert 7 cm/4 Fr short introducers. We administrated intra-arterial verapamil (1.25 mg) and heparin (100 UI/kg). We infiltrated per-operatively 2% lignocaine (10 mg) for arterial spasms, long sheaths use (≥5 Fr), and ≥60 min procedures in <3 kg patients.

Results: We identified 30 patients (66.7% males) with a median age of 1.1 months (IQR, 0.3-5.4), and a median weight of 3.1 kg (IQR, 2.7-3.7). 5/30 patients had six redo interventions after a median of 3.9 months (IQR, 1.7-5.1). Overall, 27/36 procedures were interventional, including 6 aortic valvuloplasties, 6 balloon angioplasties, and 15 stenting procedures. The median arterial axillary angiographic diameter was 2.6 mm (IQR, 2.4-3). Access was right-sided in 23/36 (63.9%) procedures and obtained using 21G/2.5 cm bevel needles in 25/36 (69.4%) procedures. No hemodynamical change occurred after introducing spasmolytic drugs. The median fluoroscopy time was 26.1 min (IQR, 19.2-34.8). There were two self-resolving arterial dissections, one sub-occlusive arterial thrombosis (resolved with 6 weeks of enoxaparin), and one occlusive arterial thrombosis (resolved with alteplase thrombolysis and 6 weeks of enoxaparin). Median follow-up was 11.7 months (IQR, 8-17.5). Four patients with complex univentricular hearts died from non-procedural causes at a median of 40 days (IQR, 31-161) postoperative.

Conclusion: Systematic approach for AAA is the key to success and unlocks the many potentials of trans-axillary pediatric cardiology interventions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10864575PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2024.1332152DOI Listing

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