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| 1. Morphology A. Anatomical characterisitics · The septal and posterior leaflets of the tricuspic vavle are displaced inferiorly towards the RV apex · The anterior leaflet is large and sail-like with abnormally numbered and placed chordal attachments · The area of right ventricle between the true tricuspid annulus and the displaced attachment of the septal and posterior leaflets is thinned and dilated (atrialized) · The remainder of the right ventricular cavity is small · The valve leaflets may be adherent to the right ventricular wall · The RV infundibulum can be obstructed by the anterior leaflet and/or its chordal attachments · The conduction system follows its normal course · The anomaly can be right or left-sided · Left-sided lesions are usually in the setting of corrected TGA and have a morphologic right-sided valve
B. Carpentier's classification
C. Associated cardiac anomalies
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| 2. Clinical Presentation A. Contributing factors · Severity of tricuspid incompetence · Presence of associated atrial septal defect · Right ventricle impairment · Other cardiac anomalies · There is a broad range of symptom severity and age of presentation
B. Neonatal Presentation
C. Other Features
D. Natural History
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| 3. Diagnosis · Cyanosis indicates significant right-to-left shunting · Palpitations are common · Chest X-ray characteristically shows a globular heart from the enlarged right atrium · 2-D echocardiography is diagnostic and accurately evaluates the following:
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| 4. Medical Management · PGE for the neonate in extremis · General supportive care of cyanotic infants · All patients eventually show progressive deterioration and will become possible candidates for surgery
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| 5. Indications for Operation · Significant tricuspid valve incompetence · Moderate to severe cyanosis with compensatory polycythemia · Congestive heart failure (NYHA class III or IV) · Extreme cardiomegaly · Arrhythmias
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| 6. Operative Technique · Tricuspid valve repair is preferred · Replace the valve if unable to repair · Plicate the atrialized right ventricle · Close any associated ASD · Interrupt accessory conduction pathways if present
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| 7. Operative Modifications A. Repair with tricuspid valve replacement · Atrial plication · The original operation replaced the tricuspid valve with a prosthetic ball valve · Current valve replacement is usually done with a mechanical prosthetic valve
B. The Mayo (Danielson) annuloplasty
C. Ring annuloplasty
D. The Carpentier repair
E. The Quaegebeur repair
F. The Starnes operation
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| 8. Results · Early (hospital) mortality is about 5% · Acute heart failure is the principal cause of early mortality · Late death is uncommon · The tricuspid valve is usually competent or has mild incompetence long-term, with a low rate of reoperation (3-5%) · Heart block is uncommon · W-P-W cured with surgical interruption · NYHA class is I or II in the majority of patients · Exercise tolerance and oxygen uptake are improved on maximal exercise testing
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