Author:
Nasser Bana Agha,Abdulrahman Mesned,Qwaee Abdullah A. L.,Alakhfash Ali,Mohamad Tageldein,Kabbani Mohamed S.,Alseedi Usama,Obedien Baraa,Chrit Abdulaziz
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
To assess the effect of cardiac surgery on growth catch-up of Down syndrome (DS) children with failure to thrive (FTT) and congenital heart disease (CHD) and investigate other causes of FTT in DS children.
Method
We conducted a retrospective observational study in tertiary cardiac center from 2015 to 2018. We included all cases of DS diagnosed with CHD and FTT who completed a 1-year follow-up after cardiac surgery. We divided the cases into two groups; “normalize group” includes children who normalized their growth parameters and “underweight group” includes those who remained in FTT category during the follow-up period. We compared both groups for multiple risk factors.
Result
Most of DS had FTT upon surgery. Fifty percent of cases completed 1-year follow-up including 29 (60%) in the normalized group and 19 (40%) in underweight group. Within 6 months post-surgery, the normalized group though did not reach yet normalization of growth parameters, demonstrated statically significant improvement in weight for age, weight Z-score in compared to underweight group.
Within 12 months post-surgery, the normalized group achieved normalization of growth parameters and continue to show more statistically significant differences in growth parameters.
Both groups had comparable post-operation course. Univariate analysis of possible peri-operative risk factors showed no difference between both groups except for presence of untreated subclinical hypothyroidism in 58% of the underweight group versus 17% in control group (p = 0.005).
Conclusion
FTT in DS patient is multifactorial which needs thorough investigation and work up by multidisciplinary team. Cardiac surgery may not guarantee the improvement of growth parameters.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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