Scimitar Syndrome

Vladimiro L. Vida(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Massimo A. Padalino(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Giovanna Boccuzzo(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Erjon Tarja(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Håkan Berggren(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Thierry Carrel(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Sertaç Çïçek(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Giancarlo Crupi(Azienda Ospedaliero Universitaria Ospedali Riuniti), Duccio Di Carlo(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Roberto Di Donato(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), José Fragata(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Mark G. Hazekamp(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Viktor Hraška(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Bohdan Maruszewski(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), D Métras(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Marco Pozzi(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), René Prêtre(University of Zurich), Jean Rubay(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Heikki Sairanen(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), George E. Sarris(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Christian Schreiber(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Bart Meyns(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), T Tláskal(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Andreas Urban(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Gaetano Thiene(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1), Giovanni Stellin(Regional Children's Clinical Hospital No. 1)
Circulation
September 7, 2010
Cited by 156Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Scimitar syndrome is a rare congenital heart disease. To evaluate the surgical results, we embarked on the European Congenital Heart Surgeons Association (ECHSA) multicentric study. METHODS AND RESULTS: From January 1997 to December 2007, we collected data on 68 patients who underwent surgery for scimitar syndrome. Primary outcomes included hospital mortality and the efficacy of repair at follow-up. Median age at surgery was 1.4 years (interquartile range, 0.46 to 7.92 years). Forty-four patients (64%) presented with symptoms. Surgical repair included intraatrial baffle in 38 patients (56%; group 1) and reimplantation of the scimitar vein onto the left atrium in 21 patients (31%; group 2). Eight patients underwent right pneumectomy, and 1 had a right lower lobe lobectomy (group 3). Four patients died in hospital (5.9%; 1 patient in group 1, 2.6%; 3 patients in group 3, 33%). Median follow-up time was 4.5 years. There were 2 late deaths (3.1%) resulting from severe pulmonary arterial hypertension. Freedom from scimitar drainage stenosis at 13 years was 83.8% in group 1 and 85.8% in group 2. Four patients in group 1 were reoperated, and 3 patients (2 in group 1 [6%] and 1 in group 2 [4.8%]) required balloon dilation/stenting for scimitar drainage stenosis. CONCLUSIONS: The surgical treatment of this rare syndrome is safe and effective. The majority of patients were asymptomatic at the follow-up control. There were a relatively high incidence of residual scimitar drainage stenosis that is similar between the 2 reported corrective surgical techniques used.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis