A Successful Surgical Treatment of Ebstein's Anomaly by Hetzer's Procedure in an Adult
10.4326/jjcvs.43.195
- VernacularTitle:成人期に診断された Ebstein 病に対する Hetzer 法による1手術例
- Author:
Mitsutaka Nakao
;
Kiyozou Morita
;
Yoshihiro Ko
;
Takayuki Abe
;
Kazuhiro Hashimoto
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Ebstein's anomaly;
tricuspid valve plasty;
Hetzer's procedure;
carpentier's procedure
- From:Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery
2014;43(4):195-199
- CountryJapan
- Language:Japanese
-
Abstract:
A 29-year-old woman, who had been diagnosed with Ebstein's anomaly associated with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia due to Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, was referred to our hospital for treatment of congestive heart failure and tachycardia. She had undergone a catheter ablation for WPW syndrome at the age of 28 years. Subsequently, surgical treatment for Ebstein's anomaly was indicated because of persistent symptoms of heart failure due to tricuspid regurgitation (TR). The echocardiogram and pathologic findings corresponded to Ebstein's anomaly of the Carpentier type B classification, with severe displacement of the septal and posterior leaflets resulting in moderate TR. A mobile anterior leaflet of sufficient size without a cleft enabled us to successfully perform Hetzer's procedure. In this procedure, the large mobile anterior leaflet was approximated to the opposing true tricuspid annulus with a mattress suture of 3-0 polypropylene passed from the anterior leaflet annulus to the true tricuspid annulus at the site of atrialized right ventricle near the coronary sinus. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the cardiothoracic ratio reduced from 56% to 48% with mild TR. In this adult case of Carpentier's type B adult Ebstein's anomaly, Hetzer's procedure allowed reconstruction of the tricuspid valve mechanism of “leaflet-to-septum” coaptation at the level of the true annulus by approximating the anterior leaflet. This was, effective in reducing the patient's moderate TR. We conclude that this procedure is a simple and reproducible method for repairing the tricuspid valve in Ebstein's anomaly, especially for cases with a large mobile anterior leaflet.