Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2873645 | The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2013 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The most common indication for reoperation after ASO is right-sided pathology, followed by neoaortic root pathology. Late survival after ASO is excellent and risk of late reoperation is low. Life-long medical surveillance is required.
Keywords
TGASVPSBlalock-TaussigLVOTRPAAVSDVSDSVCLPAECMOASOIAAPTSCircumflex arteryMAPCAAVRTransposition of great arteriesextracorporeal membrane oxygenationsuperior vena cavaPatientscoronary artery bypass graftingLeftPulmonary valve replacementAortic valve replacementCABGright pulmonary valveICDpulmonary regurgitationRIMAleft internal mammary arteryright internal mammary arteryPulmonary arteryright pulmonary arteryLeft pulmonary arteryMajor aortopulmonary collateral arteriesPVRarterial switch operationinterrupted aortic archLADLIMAleft ventricular outflow tractaortic regurgitationmitral regurgitationVentricular septal defectAtrioventricular septal defectleft anterior descending
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Authors
Vijayakumar MD, Harold M. MD, Lucian A. MD, PhD, Benjamin W. MD, Sabrina D. MD, Zhuo MS, Hartzell V. MD, Joseph A. MD,