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Echocardiography-guided percutaneous closure of oval-shaped secundum atrial septal defects. | LitMetric

Echocardiography-guided percutaneous closure of oval-shaped secundum atrial septal defects.

BMC Cardiovasc Disord

Division of Pediatric Cardiology and Congenital Heart Disease, Department of Cardiology and Vascular Medicine, National Cardiovascular Center Harapan Kita, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia.

Published: October 2024

Background: An atrial septal defect (ASD) is considered oval-shaped when its shortest diameter is less than 75% of the longest diameter. Research on percutaneous closure of oval-shaped ASDs is limited, with no known reports of non-fluoroscopic closure for this population.

Objective: To assess the effectiveness of non-fluoroscopic percutaneous closure for oval-shaped ASDs.

Methods: This single-center retrospective study evaluates patients undergoing non-fluoroscopic percutaneous closure of oval-shaped ASDs, defined by the shortest to longest diameter ratio < 0.75, a circular index of 1.33, or ultrasound visualization of an oval shape. Device size was chosen to be 0-4 mm larger than the defect's longest diameter, based on transthoracic and transesophageal ultrasound measurements.

Results: We identified 78 patients (33.3% children, 20.5% males) with a mean age of 27.4 ± 16.3 years and a mean weight of 46.8 ± 19.8 kg. The mean longest diameter and mean shortest diameter of ASDs were 23.3 ± 6.8 mm and 15.8 ± 5 mm, respectively. The mean ratio of the shortest to longest diameter was 0.7 ± 0.1. Percutaneous closure was not attempted in 7/78 (9%) patients. Three out of 71 (4.2%) procedures were fluoroscopy-guided upfront due to technical difficulties, and 5/71 (7%) were converted to fluoroscopy-guided closure. Overall procedural success rate was 98.6% (70/71) including 63/71 (88.7%) performed with zero fluoroscopy. Mean device size was 26.5 ± 7.1 mm. Mean procedural time was 45.3 ± 22.6 min. Eleven intraprocedural complications occurred including 6 arrhythmias, 3 pericardial effusions, and 2 device dislodgements.

Conclusion: Transcatheter closure of oval-shaped ASD is safe and feasible. Echocardiography is adequate for adequate operative guidance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11448078PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12872-024-04165-7DOI Listing

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