Midterm results of aortic valve reconstruction for congenital aortic stenosis with or without regurgitation.

2000 
Aortic valve is often replaced if valvular stenosis fails to be balloon dilated. Aortic valve reconstruction was performed on 4 patients from August 1993 to1999. Their ages ranged from I month to 15 years (mean 8.3 years). Unicuspid aortic valve was present in three of them and bicuspid in the other one. Two patients were associated with a patent arterial duct, one aortic regurgitation, and one pulmonary stenosis. Commissurotomy was done in three of them to transform the aortic valve into tricuspid except one, in whom bicuspid valve was preserved. In one case with unicuspid aortic valve, a piece of tanned autologous pericardium was used to augment one myxomatous and retracted leaflet. The sinus of Valsalva was molded together with a bulging shape of its aortic leaflet. All four were weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass smoothly. Transesophageal echocardiography in one case prompted rebypass to decrease the degree of regurgitation from moderate to mild by further shaping of the leaflet and sinus of Valsalva. In one patient chylopericardium was complicated and subsided in 5 days after conservative treatment. All patients were doing well on follow up at 56.8±34.4 months after surgery, with trivial to mild systolic pressure gradient (20±26 mmHg; preoperatively: 88±36 mmHg) and mild regurgitation. Aortic valve reconstruction is feasible in the setting of congenital aortic stenosis in our limited experience; repair instead of replacement is recommended even when regurgitation is present.
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