1. Percutaneous or surgical management of post-infarction ventricular septal defects: The United Kingdom National Registry
- Author
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Giblett, JP, Matetic, A, Jenkins, D, Ng, CY, Venuraju, S, MacCarthy, T, Vibhishanan, J, O’Neill, JP, Kirmani, BH, Pullan, DM, Stables, RH, Andrews, J, Nicolas, B, Kim, WC, Kanyal, R, Butler, MA, Butler, R, George, S, Khurana, A, Crossland, DS, Marczak, J, Smith, WHT, Thomson, JDR, Bentham, JR, Clapp, BR, Buch, M, Hayes, N, Byrne, J, MacCarthy, P, Aggarwal, SK, Shapiro, LM, Turner, MS, de Giovanni, J, Northridge, DB, Hildick-Smith, D, Mamas, M, and Calvert, PA
- Subjects
RD32 ,R735 ,R1 ,RD - Abstract
Background and Aims Postinfarction ventricular septal defect (PIVSD) is a mechanical complication of myocardial infarction (MI) with a poor prognosis. Surgical repair is the mainstay of treatment, although percutaneous closure is increasingly undertaken. Methods Patients treated with surgical or percutaneous repair of PIVSD (2010-2021) were identified at 16 UK centres. Case note review was undertaken. The primary outcome was long-term mortality. Patient groups were allocated based upon initial management (percutaneous or surgical). Results 362 patients received 416 procedures (131 percutaneous, 231 surgery). 16.1% of percutaneous patients subsequently had surgery. 7.8% of surgical patients subsequently had percutaneous treatment. Times from MI to treatment were the similar (percutaneous 9[6-14] vs. surgical 9[4-22] days, p=0.18). Surgical patients were more likely to have cardiogenic shock (62.8% vs. 51.9, p=0.044). Percutaneous patients were substantially older (72 [64-77] vs. 67[61-73] years, p
- Published
- 2022