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Neonatal Diagnosis

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Congenital heart surgery moving into era of outcomes research-Can't just ask for ... The heart is stilled with cardioplegia, the pump is turned off and the pump ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neonatal Diagnosis


1
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2
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • Nursery is the ideal time to diagnose
    congenital heart disease (if not prenatally
    diagnosed) in order to assure early appropriate
    care
  • Many problems very subtle in early NB period
  • Some present after ductus closes (8-48? Hours)
  • Some present when PulmonaryVascular Resistance
    drops (2-6 weeks)
  • Some very minor findings won t be obvious for
    years (minor coarct, ASD, bicusp AV)

3
Flow from RV to descending Aorta via ductus,
PAs tiny
Ductal flow reverses, Branch PAs open up
Ductus closes,
Then PVR drops (2mos)
  • Fetal Circulation
  • 8 Hours old
  • 24 hrs

4
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • English study 1590 total pts
  • 45 ? diagnosed prior to d/c
  • 20 ? presented before 6 weeks of age
  • 10 ? at 6wk NB exam
  • 24 ? diagnosed later in 1st year of life
  • 1 ? die of heart disease undiagnosed (2 ?
    Baltimore)

5
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • 50 ? of babies with murmur in first few days of
    life have CHD
  • 25 ? of babies with murmur at 6 weeks have CHD
  • Diagnoses most likely to lead to death soon after
    discharge HLH, IAA, Coarctation (they look pink
    until ductus closes)
  • Some get irreversible pulmonary vascular disease
    and cant be repaired- shortened life

6
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • When to get consult on a newborn
  • Pathological Murmur
  • Cyanosis (sats less than 95)
  • Poor pulses/perfusion
  • Add where

7
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • NY study Screening for CHD with Pulse Oximetry
  • Current newborn screening looks for diseases much
    rarer than CHD
  • Post ductal saturations on all babies at two
    hospitals at time of NB screen. 11,281 babies/1
    yr
  • If sat ?95 ?echocardiogram done
  • Results 4 abnormal sats
  • 3 CHD (2 TAPVR, 1 Truncus)
  • 1 Pulmonary Htn,
  • 1/3760 incidence

8
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • This method of screening will only catch cyanotic
    lesions such as
  • Hypoplastic Left Heart
  • Pulmonary Atresia
  • D-Transposition of Great Arteries
  • Total Anomalous Pulmonary Veins
  • Tricuspid Atresia
  • Will not catch coarctation or Aortic Stenosis,
    VSD, ASD, pulmonic stenosis

Koppel et al. Pediatrics 2003
9
Neonatal Diagnosis
  • Hospitals locally starting to set up program
  • Requires O2 sat screening after 24 hours
  • REQUIRES method to do echo (tech, training, and
    pediatric Cardiologist to read echo)
  • Probably more valuable at facilities where few
    patients get fetal echos

10
Neonatal Surgery
  • Who gets it
  • Mortality
  • Long-term neurological outcomes

11
Neonatal Surgery
  • Who gets it
  • Ductal dependant lesions
  • Iaa
  • HRHS
  • HLHS
  • Single Ventricle PA
  • Coarctation/arch hypoplasia
  • TAPVR
  • TGA
  • Truncus Arteriosus

12
Neonatal Surgery
  • Mortality
  • Congenital heart surgery moving into era of
    outcomes research-Cant just ask for
    institutional mortality for CH surgery. Need to
    ask what is mortality by risk category for
    particular type of patient and surgery.
  • 2 systems out there, RACHS and Aristotle score

Jenkins et al. Journal of Thoracic and
Cardiovascular Surgery, 2002
13
Neonatal Surgery
  • Risk Categories
  • 1 ASD, PDA (30 d) , coarct (30 d)
  • 2ASD/VSD, TOF, Glenn, sub AS
  • 3AVR, Ross procedure, MVR
  • 4arterial switch, Truncus arteriosus
  • 5truncus and interrupted arch
  • 6 Norwood, Damus-Kaye-Stansel

14
Neonatal Surgery
RACHS surgical risk groups and OHSU
congenital heart surgery outcomes (1/01-9/04)
Mortality
(0/104)
(2/304)
(5/274)
(8/92)
(4/35)
Risk Category
(940 patients)
(JTCVS 2000, 123110-8)
15
Neonatal Surgery
  • Long-term neurological outcomes
  • Cognitive and adaptive behavior abnl and lower
    than expected at school age for heart transplant
    HLHS pts
  • Similar for Norwood?glenn?fontan

16
Neonatal Surgery
  • New study compares TCA vs low flow
    cardiopulmonary bypass (with short CA) in
    neonates having arterial switch

17
CardioPulmonary Bypass
18
CPB Circuit
IVC and SVC Cannulae
Aortic Cannula
oxygenator
pump
Rtn to Body
Heater/Cooler
19
Neonatal Surgery
  • Total Circulatory Arrest- the body is cooled by
    the CPB pump to enable the body to withstand no
    blood flow. The heart is stilled with
    cardioplegia, the pump is turned off and the pump
    catheters are removed.

20
Neonatal Surgery
  • TCA effect not noticed if less than 40 min.
    After 41 min worse outcome longer TCA.
  • At 8 years oldBoth groups had ?academic, fine
    motor, visual spatial, attention and higher order
    thinking than expected for general population.
    1/3 in special ed or remedial education

21
Neonatal Surgery
  • TCA-worse manual dexterity, apraxia, V-M
    tracking, Handwriting
  • Low flow bypass--?impulsiveness, worse behavior
  • These results appear to be worse than surgeries
    done at greater than 30 days of age why?
  • Neonates have more seizures
  • Immature neurons

Bellinger et al. J Thoracic Cardiovascular
Surgery 2003
22
Neonatal Surgery
  • Advantages
  • One surgery
  • Less hypoxia
  • Maybe shorter LOS
  • Disadvantages
  • Perhaps worse long-term neuro outcome
  • Because we can should we?

23
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • Atrial Septostomy
  • Stent Ductus
  • Ductal Closure
  • Pulmonary and Aortic Balloon valvuloplasty
  • ASD, VSD closure
  • Stent pulmonary arteries

24
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • Atrial Septostomy
  • Can be done at bedside
  • Use a cutting blade and balloon or stent

25
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • Patent Ductus Arteriosus
  • Surgery vs. Coiling

26
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • Critical Aortic Stenosis

27
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • Critical Pulmonary Stenosis

28
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • ASD Device Closure

29
Treatment in Cath Lab
  • VSD Closure
  • In Phase II trials

30
Pulmonary Artery Stents
  • Inserted for branch pulmonary artery stenosis
    (often a complication of other surgeries).
  • Device positioned then opened up to allow better
    flow distal to device

31
The End
32
References
  • Siu et al. Prospective Multicenter Study of
    Pregnancy Outcomes in Women with heart Disease.
    Circulation 104
  • Kumar RK Comparison of outcome when hypoplastic
    left heart syndrome and transposition of the
    great arteries are diagnosed prenatally versus
    when diagnosis of these two conditions is made
    only postnatally. - Am J Cardiol 1999 83
  • Mahle et al. Impact of prenatal diagnosis on
    survival and early neurological morbidity in
    neonates with Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome
    Pediatrics 107

33
References
  • Hoehn et al. Assessment of Parental Stress and
    Decision making in critical cong heart disease
    prenatal vs Postnatal diagnosis In publication
  • Kuehl et al. Failure to Diagnose Congenital heart
    Disease in Infancy. Pediatrics April 1999.
  • Koppel et al. Effectiveness of Pulse Oximetry
    Screening for Congenital Heart disease in
    Asymptomatic Newborns. Pediatrics March 2003
  • Bellinger et al. Boston Circulatory Arrest Study.
    J Thoracic Cardiovascular Surgery 2003

34
  • Jenkins et al. Consensus-based method for risk
    adjustment for surgery for congenital heart
    disease Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular
    Surgery, Volume 123, January 2002
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