Affiliation:
1. Congenital and Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery Unit, Ancona Hospital, Italy
Abstract
Proponents of a telemetrically adjustable pulmonary artery band (PAB) device have cited simplified postoperative management and shortened length of stay as advantages associated with that technology. This report concerns a recent experience with both conventional pulmonary artery banding (conv-PAB) and the telemetrically adjustable PAB FloWatch (FW-PAB). From January 2005 through December 2008, 19 consecutive infants underwent either conv-PAB (8 patients, mean age 3.5 months, mean weight 4.1 kg) or FW-PAB (11 patients, mean age 2.6 months, mean weight 3.1 kg). Indications for PAB were left ventricular retraining (1 patient in FW-PAB), palliation prior to biventricular repair (7 patients in conv-PAB and 10 in FW-PAB group), and staged univentricular repair (1 patient in conv-PAB). In-hospital mortality was 0%. In the FW-PAB group, 1 FloWatch device was removed because of hemodynamic compromise related to the bulk of the device. There were no major complications in the conv-PAB group and no differences between groups with respect to postoperative ventilation time or length of stay in the intensive care unit or in hospital. In the FW-PAB group, a mean of 3.1 ± 1.7 regulations per patient were undertaken. Of the regulations, 85% (29/34) were adjustments to tighten the device, and 15% (5/34) were to loosen it. During follow-up, 8 patients underwent intracardiac repair and pulmonary artery debanding: 4 in the conv-PAB group and 4 in the FW-PAB group. The course of patients in both groups after PAB were similar. Major differences in length of stay and resource utilization were not apparent.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health,Surgery
Cited by
3 articles.
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