A new surgical technique for left atrial reduction in giant left atrium
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Authors
Ríos-Ortega, Josías C.Talledo-Paredes, Luisa
Yepez-Calderón, Cristian
Callalli-Mattos, Edmy
Gonzales-Castro, Silvana
Al-kassab-Córdova, Ali
Aguilar-Carranza, Cristian
Pérez-Valverde, Yemmy
Hernandez, Adrian V.
Mezones-Holguin, Edward
Issue Date
2023-02-01Keywords
atrial fibrillationdeveloping countries
giant left atrium
left atrial reduction surgery
mitral valve disease
Surgical technique
Giant left atrium
Safety
Clinical outcomes
Echocardiographic outcomes
Left atrium reduction
Rheumatic mitral valve disease
Mitral valve surgery
Major adverse valvular-related events
Clinical functionality
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
Elsevier Inc.Journal
JTCVS TechniquesDOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xjtc.2022.10.013Additional Links
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9938381/pdf/main.pdfAbstract
Objective: The study objective was to evaluate the safety and clinical and echocardiographic outcomes of a new surgical technique in adult patients diagnosed with a giant left atrium. Methods: We analyzed a cohort of patients who underwent left atrium reduction surgery between January 2016 and June 2020 performed by a specialized surgical team in 2 national reference centers in Lima, Peru. We assessed the major adverse valvular-related events and the New York Heart Association functional class as primary clinical outcomes. Also, our primary echocardiographic endings were the diameter, area, and volume of the left atrium. We assessed these variables at 3 time periods: baseline (t0), perioperative period (t1), and extended follow-up (t2: 12 3.4 months). We carried out descriptive and bivariate exploratory statistical analysis for dependent measures. Results: We included 17 patients, 70.6% of whom were women. Rheumatic mitral valve disease (76.5%) was the main etiology. We performed 14 (82.4%) mitral valve replacements and 3 repairs. Major adverse valvular-related events occurred in 1 patient (5.9%) (hemorrhagic stroke) at t1. A significant reduction in the size of the left atrium was observed: diameter (77 mm vs 48 mm, P<.001), area (75 cm2 vs 31 cm2P<.001), and volume (332 cm3 vs 90 cm3 , P<.001). Compared with t0 and t1, these echocardiographic findings remained without significant changes during t2. Conclusions: Our surgical left atrium reduction technique was associated with improved clinical functionality and reduced left atrium measures in patients with a giant left atrium undergoing mitral valve surgery. (JTCVS Techniques 2023;17:56-64)Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleRights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessLanguage
engEISSN
26662507ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xjtc.2022.10.013
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