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1.
Rev Esp Cardiol ; 49(11): 804-9, 1996 Nov.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9082490

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic heart failure and pulmonary arterial hypertension are at risk of developing fatal right graft failure after transplantation, and there is no agreement about the limit of pulmonary vascular resistance for such risk. PURPOSE: To study what the impact is on the survival of a degree of pulmonary hypertension not considered to be an exclusion for orthotopic heart transplantation and to analyze the hemodynamic profile in the minor circuit after surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We studied a group of 69 patients consecutively transplanted and with followup of at least one year. Patients were classified in two groups depending on the hemodynamic factors previous to transplant: group A (without pulmonary hypertension, 22 patients) and group B (with pulmonary hypertension, 47 patients). After heart transplantation we analyzed the causes of mortality and the evolution hemodynamic profile in both groups. RESULTS: In the group of patients with pulmonary hypertension there was an increase in perioperative mortality due to graft failure (p < 0.05), although at the end of the first year, the survival rate was similar in both groups. After heart transplantation, the level of pulmonary pressures dropped in the same group, but at the end of the first year, a 17% of the patients maintains some criteria of pulmonary hypertension. CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirm that degrees of pulmonary hypertension classically not considered as an exclusion for orthotopic heart transplantation were associated with an increase mortality by graft failure. The majority of survivors after heart transplantation normalize pulmonary pressures at one year of transplantation.


Subject(s)
Heart Transplantation/mortality , Hemodynamics/physiology , Hypertension, Pulmonary/physiopathology , Adult , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Transplantation/physiology , Humans , Hypertension, Pulmonary/complications , Male , Middle Aged , Survival Rate
2.
Rev Esp Cardiol ; 49(10): 776-9, 1996 Oct.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9036483

ABSTRACT

Parameters of flow, temperature and perfusion, and modifications in body fluids secondary to surgery with extracorporeal circulation do not imply an increase in maternal risk during pregnancy but they eventually considerably increase fetal morbimortality. We present the case of a 22 week pregnant woman with severe aortic stenosis who underwent extracorporeal surgery for valve replacement without fetal mortality during the procedure. Literature about the use of extracorporeal surgery in the treatment of valve pathology in pregnancy, the parameters in which the reduction of fetal morbimortality is based and alternative treatments are broadly reviewed.


Subject(s)
Aortic Valve Stenosis/surgery , Extracorporeal Circulation , Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular/surgery , Adult , Female , Humans , Pregnancy
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