Treatment of Congenital Aortic Stenosis
- 1 November 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 107 (5), 649-651
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1973.01350230009003
Abstract
Thirty-eight patients with congenital valvular aortic stenosis, ages 1 to 21 years, underwent aortic valvotomy between 1957 and 1967. The conditions of 37 patients have been evaluated postoperatively, and the mean duration of follow-up is ten years. There were no operative deaths, but there was one late death attributable to heart disease. Relief of symptoms has been gratifying, and 90% of the patients are asymptomatic currently. Twenty patients have murmurs of aortic regurgitation, and three of these patients have required aortic valve replacement. Postoperative hemodynamic assessments have shown that valvotomy reduced the valvular gradient in each patient. Thus, long-term relief of congenital valvular aortic stenosis may be effected by valvotomy with minimal operative and postoperative risk.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The natural history of congenital aortic stenosis.Heart, 1968
- CONGENITAL AORTIC STENOSIS PRODUCED BY A UNICOMMISSURAL VALVEHeart, 1965
- Congenital Aortic StenosisCirculation, 1958
- The outlook for children with congenital aortic stenosisAmerican Heart Journal, 1957