Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study

Aim. To analyze the immediate outcomes of reinterventions after Ross procedure.Material and methods. From April 2009 to December 2022, 224 Ross operations in adults were performed at the Federal Center for Cardiovascular Surgery. The retrospective study included 17 patients who required repeated int...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: I. I. Chernov, S. T. Enginoev, A. A. Zenkov, U. K. Abdulmejidova, M. A. Guliyev
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: «FIRMA «SILICEA» LLC 2023-12-01
Series:Российский кардиологический журнал
Subjects:
Online Access:https://russjcardiol.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/5432
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1839576516337336320
author I. I. Chernov
S. T. Enginoev
A. A. Zenkov
U. K. Abdulmejidova
M. A. Guliyev
author_facet I. I. Chernov
S. T. Enginoev
A. A. Zenkov
U. K. Abdulmejidova
M. A. Guliyev
author_sort I. I. Chernov
collection DOAJ
description Aim. To analyze the immediate outcomes of reinterventions after Ross procedure.Material and methods. From April 2009 to December 2022, 224 Ross operations in adults were performed at the Federal Center for Cardiovascular Surgery. The retrospective study included 17 patients who required repeated interventions (14 men/3 women). The mean age of the patients was 38±11 years, with a minimum age of 21 and a maximum of 54 years. A history of infective endocarditis was revealed in 4 (23,5%) patients, hypertension — in 3 (17,6%) patients. Of the 17 included patients, 15 patients underwent the classic Ross operation ("full root replacement"), while 2 — a modified technique (1 — wrapping with aorta, 1 — wrapping with a Dacron graft). Annulus enhancement was previously performed in 3 patients.Results. Interventions on the pulmonary autograft and homograft were performed in 16 and 4 cases, respectively. The main indication for pulmonary autograft intervention was aortic regurgitation in 15 cases, and neoaortic aneurysm in 14 cases. In 3 patients, there was pulmonary homograft stenosis, while in 1 case — thrombosis. Two patients required interventions on other valves: 1 — mitral valve stenosis, 1 — severe tricuspid regurgitation. Mean reoperation, cardiopulmonary bypass and myocardial ischemia time were 289±62, 126±35 and 98±22 min, respectively. Combined interventions were performed in 6 cases. David valve-sparing procedure was performed in 9 patients, Bentall-de Bono technique — in 3, aortic valve repair — in 2, mechanical aortic valve replacement — in 2, supracoronary ascending aorta replacement — in 2, pulmonary homograft replacement — in 2, pulmonary homograft thrombectomy — in 1, pulmonary homograft repair — in 1 patient, mitral valve replacement — in 1 patient, tricuspid valve repair — in 1 patient. One patient required resternotomy for bleeding. There were no postoperative complications (perioperative myocardial infarction, acute kidney injury, stroke, sternal infection, cardiac tamponade) and deaths. The median length of stay in intensive care unit was 21 [16-23] hours.Conclusion. Reoperations after the Ross procedure may be required for different pathologies, but all can be performed surgically with a high safety in experienced operator.
format Article
id doaj-art-10f2fe7ea6ff4926a94839d80b0d0a0c
institution Matheson Library
issn 1560-4071
2618-7620
language Russian
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher «FIRMA «SILICEA» LLC
record_format Article
series Российский кардиологический журнал
spelling doaj-art-10f2fe7ea6ff4926a94839d80b0d0a0c2025-08-04T13:00:32Zrus«FIRMA «SILICEA» LLCРоссийский кардиологический журнал1560-40712618-76202023-12-01284S10.15829/1560-4071-2023-54323918Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective studyI. I. Chernov0S. T. Enginoev1A. A. Zenkov2U. K. Abdulmejidova3M. A. Guliyev4Federal Center for Cardiovascular SurgeryFederal Center for Cardiovascular Surgery; Federal Center for Cardiovascular SurgeryFederal Center for Cardiovascular SurgeryFederal Center for Cardiovascular SurgeryFederal Center for Cardiovascular SurgeryAim. To analyze the immediate outcomes of reinterventions after Ross procedure.Material and methods. From April 2009 to December 2022, 224 Ross operations in adults were performed at the Federal Center for Cardiovascular Surgery. The retrospective study included 17 patients who required repeated interventions (14 men/3 women). The mean age of the patients was 38±11 years, with a minimum age of 21 and a maximum of 54 years. A history of infective endocarditis was revealed in 4 (23,5%) patients, hypertension — in 3 (17,6%) patients. Of the 17 included patients, 15 patients underwent the classic Ross operation ("full root replacement"), while 2 — a modified technique (1 — wrapping with aorta, 1 — wrapping with a Dacron graft). Annulus enhancement was previously performed in 3 patients.Results. Interventions on the pulmonary autograft and homograft were performed in 16 and 4 cases, respectively. The main indication for pulmonary autograft intervention was aortic regurgitation in 15 cases, and neoaortic aneurysm in 14 cases. In 3 patients, there was pulmonary homograft stenosis, while in 1 case — thrombosis. Two patients required interventions on other valves: 1 — mitral valve stenosis, 1 — severe tricuspid regurgitation. Mean reoperation, cardiopulmonary bypass and myocardial ischemia time were 289±62, 126±35 and 98±22 min, respectively. Combined interventions were performed in 6 cases. David valve-sparing procedure was performed in 9 patients, Bentall-de Bono technique — in 3, aortic valve repair — in 2, mechanical aortic valve replacement — in 2, supracoronary ascending aorta replacement — in 2, pulmonary homograft replacement — in 2, pulmonary homograft thrombectomy — in 1, pulmonary homograft repair — in 1 patient, mitral valve replacement — in 1 patient, tricuspid valve repair — in 1 patient. One patient required resternotomy for bleeding. There were no postoperative complications (perioperative myocardial infarction, acute kidney injury, stroke, sternal infection, cardiac tamponade) and deaths. The median length of stay in intensive care unit was 21 [16-23] hours.Conclusion. Reoperations after the Ross procedure may be required for different pathologies, but all can be performed surgically with a high safety in experienced operator.https://russjcardiol.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/5432aortic stenosisaortic regurgitationacquired heart diseaseaortic valve replacementaortic valveross operation
spellingShingle I. I. Chernov
S. T. Enginoev
A. A. Zenkov
U. K. Abdulmejidova
M. A. Guliyev
Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study
Российский кардиологический журнал
aortic stenosis
aortic regurgitation
acquired heart disease
aortic valve replacement
aortic valve
ross operation
title Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study
title_full Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study
title_fullStr Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study
title_short Reoperations after Ross procedure: a retrospective study
title_sort reoperations after ross procedure a retrospective study
topic aortic stenosis
aortic regurgitation
acquired heart disease
aortic valve replacement
aortic valve
ross operation
url https://russjcardiol.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/5432
work_keys_str_mv AT iichernov reoperationsafterrossprocedurearetrospectivestudy
AT stenginoev reoperationsafterrossprocedurearetrospectivestudy
AT aazenkov reoperationsafterrossprocedurearetrospectivestudy
AT ukabdulmejidova reoperationsafterrossprocedurearetrospectivestudy
AT maguliyev reoperationsafterrossprocedurearetrospectivestudy