1.Aorto-Right Ventricular Fistula and Vegetation in the Right Ventricle Associated with Infective Endocarditis after Aortic Valve Replacement
Hiroshi Kumano ; Keisuke Shuntoh ; Akimitsu Yamaguchi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2011;40(2):66-68
We report a rare case of aorto-right ventricular fistula and vegetation in the right ventricle after aortic valve replacement. A 74-year-old woman with a history of aortic valve replacement with a Carpentier-Edwards Perimount pericardial bioprosthesis 7 months earlier was admitted with fever. Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus was detected from her blood culture. Transthoracic echocardiography showed an aorto-right ventricular fistula and vegetation in the right ventricle. Under a diagnosis of infective endocarditis, surgery was performed. The operative findings showed a fistula from the previous aortic suture line to the right ventricle, and substantial vegetation in the right ventricular outflow tract. No infective change was observed in the previously inserted prosthetic or pulmonary valves. The vegetation was removed and the fistula was closed directly with a single pledgeted 4-0 prolene mattress suture. The right ventricular outflow tract was reconstructed with a heterogeneous pericardial patch. The patient was discharged in good health on the 59th postoperative day without any infective complications.
2.Successful Surgical Management of Lipoma in the Right Ventricle
Kazuhito Tatsu ; Toru Uezu ; Moriichi Sugama ; Akimitsu Yamaguchi ; Keisuke Shuntoh ; Hiroshi Kumano ; Seiya Kato
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2013;42(6):489-493
We report a rare case of lipoma arising from the right ventricle. A 66-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for exertional chest pain and fatigability. She was diagnosed of mild aortic stenosis and regurgitation (ASR), mild mitral regurgitation (MR), and asymptomatic cardiac tumor in the right ventricle about two years previously, for which she had been followed up at other local hospital. A recheck transthoracic echocardiography revealed moderate MR. No evidence of deterioration of ASR and cardiac lipoma were detected. The patient underwent mitral annuloplasty and replacement of aortic valve, plus resection of the right ventricle tumor through the tricuspid valve. Pathological examination of the resected tumor showed mature adipose tissue infiltrated into normal cardiac muscle without atypical cells, which suggested intramyocardial lipoma. Postoperative course was uneventful. Fourteen months after the operation, the patient remains asymptomatic and regular echocardiographic checkup demonstrates no tumor recurrence or residual MR.
3.Progressive Heart Failure on Long after Mitral Valve Replacement for Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy.
Sakashi Noji ; Nobuo Kitamura ; Akimitsu Yamaguchi ; Taichi Miki ; Keisuke Shuntoh ; Shunichi Kimura
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1996;25(5):314-317
The 37-year-old woman underwent mitral valve replacement (MVR) with a Carpentier-Edwards bioprosthesis for hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) 14 years previously. Since the 10th postoperative year, progressive right heart failure due to tricuspid valve regurgitation was recognized. Therefore, reoperation was recommended. At the time of reoperation in the 14th postoperative year, the cavity of the left ventricle was markedly diminished. In particular, deformitiy of the right ventricle was found. This was considered to be the effect of progressive septal hypertrophy. The mitral valve was replaced with a 25mm Carpentier-Edwards and the tricuspid valve with a 31mm Carpentier-Edwards bioprosthesis. Although the weaning from the cardiopulmonary bypass was uneventful, postoperative right heart failure occured with hyperbilirubinemia followed by multiple organ failure. She died on the 47th postoperative day. At autopsy, the intraventricular septal thickness was 24mm and the cavities of left and right ventricle were almost occluded by septal hypertrophy. This is considered to be a rare case of long-term survival after MVR in a patient with HOCM.
4.Autotransplantation and Concomitant Pneunectomy for an Intracardiac Metastatic Lesion and Primary Pulmonary Blastoma of the Left Lung
Masaaki Yamagishi ; Keisuke Shuntoh ; Tsutomu Matsushita ; Akiyuki Takahashi ; Katsuji Fujiwara ; Takeshi Shinkawa ; Takako Miyazaki ; Nobuo Kitamura ; Shougo Toda
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2004;33(1):38-41
Pulmonary blastoma is rare and its prognosis very poor. A 6-year-old boy was referred to our hospital with chest pain. Computed tomography demonstrated that the left pleural cavity was filled with a tumor. Cardiac echocardiography demonstrated that the tumor had invaded through the pulmonary vein into the left atrium and that the tumor extended into the left ventricle. Part of the tumor was adhered to the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve. To increase operative radicality, an autotransplantation technique was performed concomitantly with resection of the original lesion. Through a median sternotomy, a moderate hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass was established to obtain cardiac arrest. First, longitudinal incision of right-sided of the left atrium was made. The tumor invaded into the left atrium through the left superior pulmonary orifice. The ascending aorta, the main pulmonary artery, and both caval veins were transected. The left atrium was incised along the pulmonary venous orifices. The heart was completely removed from the mediastinum and transferred to another table. Resection of the intracardiac metastatic lesion and mitral valve replacement was accomplished. During this time, thoracic surgeons performed a left pneunectomy. The left atrial wall around the left pulmonary venous orifices was resected in combination with the left lung. After the deficit of the left atrial wall was repaired with a Gore-Tex patch, the heart was replaced and we reconstructed the great arteries and caval veins. The autotransplantation technique is a useful procedure for combined lesions of the heart and lung.