| From your Guide Dr.MANI | ||
Transposition of Great Arteries | ||
Arterial Switch Operation
This elegant operation is simple in concept. Yet it was only first successfully performed in the late
1970s by Dr.Jatene in Brazil. This was mainly due to the technical difficulty in connecting the
CORONARY ARTERIES to the new aorta. Coronary arteries as you know are the first branches
of the aorta, and supply blood to the heart muscle itself.
How is an arterial switch operation (ASO) done ?
Surgery is carried out through an opening in the middle of the chest. The heart will have to be
stopped temporarily during the operation. So the surgeon will first hook up the patient to the
heart-lung machine. The aorta and pulmonary artery are disconnected from their abnormal
attachments. Their positions are then "SWITCHED". The aorta is stitched back to the left ventricle
and the pulmonary artery to the right ventricle. A VSD is closed, if present. The coronary arteries
are also freed, and connected back to the aorta using very delicate hair-thin sutures. When you
consider that the size of these coronary arteries in a new-born is hardly a millimeter, you can
imagine the technical skill and expertise that the surgeon must possess to carry out this connection
without mishap.
What are the advantages of an arterial switch operation ?
What are the problems with an ARTERIAL switch operation (ASO) ?
ASO is a technically demanding and difficult operation, and may take sometime to perfect.
Different surgeons and institutions have varying results. ASO is not suited for all patients.
Abnormalities in coronary arteries greatly increase the difficulty of an ASO. And an ASO cannot
be performed in patients who come to medical attention at an older age, or who have severe
pulmonary valve abnormalities.
What is the long term outcome after ASO ?
When an ASO is performed well, the mortality risk is minimal, and long term survival is excellent.
Essentially all patients are active without any limitations. Although the longest follow-up is barely 20
years, it is predicted that about 90% of operated patients will survive to this period.
Late complications are uncommon. Rare problems are obstruction at the site of connection of the
pulmonary artery to the right ventricle, producing Pulmonary Stenosis, and sometimes leak of the
new aortic valve - Aortic Regurgitation. A second operation has hardly ever been necessary for
these complications.
Atrial Switch Procedures
 
 
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