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  • Title: Tricuspid atresia. Results of treatment in 115 children.
    Author: de Brux JL, Zannini L, Binet JP, Neveux JY, Langlois J, Hazan E, Planche C, Leca F, Marchand M.
    Journal: J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg; 1983 Mar; 85(3):440-6. PubMed ID: 6827851.
    Abstract:
    We present our experience in the management of tricuspid atresia in 115 children. The anatomic data are categorized as follows: type I, 83.5%, type II, 16.5%. Type IB is the most frequent, representing 63.5% of all the cases. Each patient was operated upon one to four times. The age at first operation ranged from 10 days to 20 years. The first operation was a shunt in 94 children, a Fontan operation in four, and banding of the pulmonary artery in 17. Hospital mortality for the first operation was 12.2%, significantly higher in children under 6 months and in those having Waterston shunts. Potts and Blalock-Taussig operations give low long-term mortality; although few (six) have been done, Potts shunts also seem to give good long-term palliation in this series. The Glenn anastomosis is a good operation when performed after a systemic-pulmonary arterial shunt. The Fontan operation was performed in 24 children (hospital mortality 16.6%). There have been no late deaths after the third month postoperatively. Mean follow-up for this operation is only 2 years, but 88% of the survivors lead a normal life, two thirds of them receiving no treatment. There has been one reoperation for stenosis of a Dacron conduit with a good result. Late arrhythmias are well tolerated. In conclusion, the Fontan procedure is a good operation, but palliative procedures still allow good long-term survival.
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