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Title: | Repair of congenital heart disease with associated pulmonary hypertension in children: what are the minimal investigative procedures? consensus statement from the congenital heart disease and pediatric task forces, pulmonary Vascular Research Institute (PVRI) |
Authors: | Lopes, Antonio Augusto Barst, Robyn J. Haworth, Sheila Glennis Rabinovitch, Marlene Dabbagh, Maha Al Cerro, Maria Jesus del vy, Dunbar I. Kashour, Tarek Kumar, Krishna Harikrishnan, S. D’Alto, Michele Thomaz, Ana Maria Zorzanelli, Leina Aiello, Vera D. Mocumbi, Ana O. Santana, Maria Virginia T. Galal, Ahmed Nasser Banjar, Hanaa Tamimi, Omar Heath, Alexandra Flores, Patricia C. Diaz, Gabriel Sandoval, Julio Kothari, Shyam Moledina, Shahin Gonçalves, Rilvani C. Barreto, Alessandra C. Binotto, Maria Angélica Maia, Margarida Habshan, Fahad Al Adatia, Ian |
Keywords: | Congenital heart disease Pulmonary hypertension Cardiac catheterization Pediatric cardiac surgery Postoperative care |
Issue Date: | 2014 |
Publisher: | Pulmonary Circulation |
Abstract: | Standardization of the diagnostic routine for children with congenital heart disease associatedwith pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH-CHD) is crucial, in particular since inappropriate assignmentto repair of the cardiac lesions (e.g., surgical repair in patients with elevated pulmonary vascular resis-tance) may be detrimental and associated with poor outcomes. Thus, members of the Congenital HeartDisease and Pediatric Task Forces of the Pulmonary Vascular Research Institute decided to conduct asurvey aimed at collecting expert opinion from different institutions in several countries, covering manyaspects of the management of PAH-CHD, from clinical recognition to noninvasive and invasive diagnosticprocedures and immediate postoperative support. In privileged communities, the vast majority of childrenwith congenital cardiac shunts are now treated early in life, on the basis of noninvasive diagnostic eval-uation, and have an uneventful postoperative course, with no residual PAH. However, a small percentageof patients (older at presentation, with extracardiac syndromes or absence of clinical features of increasedpulmonary blood flow, thus suggesting elevated pulmonary vascular resistance) remain at a higher risk ofcomplications and unfavorable outcomes. These patients need a more sophisticated diagnostic approach,including invasive procedures. The authors emphasize that decision making regarding operability is basednot only on cardiac catheterization data but also on the complete diagnostic picture, which includes theclinical history, physical examination, and all aspects of noninvasive evaluation. |
URI: | http://www.repositorio.uem.mz/handle258/1049 |
Appears in Collections: | Artigos Publicados em Revistas Cientificas - FAMED |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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2014 - Mocumbi, Ana O.pdf | 8.69 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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