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Obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: current perspectives on mitral leaflet shortening
Phillips, Katherine G; Scheinerman, Joshua A; Massera, Daniele; Nampi, Robert; Paone, Darien; Sherrid, Mark V; Swistel, Daniel G
UNLABELLED:Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common monogenic cardiac disease, affecting approximately 0.2% of the general population. Despite its prevalence, it remains significantly underdiagnosed clinically. Surgical management of obstructive HCM has advanced extensively, particularly in understanding the mitral valve's contribution to left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO). Historically, LVOTO was attributed mainly to septal hypertrophy and treated through isolated septal myectomy. However, contemporary insights highlight the importance of mitral leaflet elongation and abnormal papillary muscle dynamics in this pathology. Mitral leaflet shortening, either through horizontal plication or direct excision (ReLex), alongside the release of abnormal papillary muscle attachments, has emerged as a complementary strategy to standard septal myectomy. These combined approaches have demonstrated improved surgical outcomes, including reduced mitral regurgitation, alleviation of LVOTO, and excellent mid-term survival. This review synthesizes current evidence and clinical experiences, providing insights into mitral leaflet shortening's role and the comprehensive surgical strategies for managing obstructive HCM. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION/UNASSIGNED:The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12055-025-02051-1.
PMCID:12847584
PMID: 41613495
ISSN: 0970-9134
CID: 6003742
Precision myectomy: Real-time on-pump intracardiac echocardiography for resection in patients with thin septa
Phillips, Katherine G; Nampi, Robert G; Sherrid, Mark V; Massera, Daniele; Xia, Yuhe; Saric, Muhamed; Grossi, Eugene; Colon, Pedro; Scheinerman, Joshua A; Swistel, Daniel G
OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:During septal myectomy, once the heart is arrested and drained of blood on cardiopulmonary bypass, transesophageal echocardiography can no longer assess septal thickness. In the present study, we evaluated the effectiveness of on-pump intracardiac echocardiography (OPIE) for real-time intraoperative septal thickness assessment in patients with preoperative thickness ≤2.0 cm. Our hypothesis was that OPIE measurements would be conconcordant with the pre- and postcardiopulmonary bypass transesophageal echocardiography measurements that are at present the primary operative guides. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:We retrospectively reviewed patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and septal thickness ≤2.0 cm on transthoracic echocardiography who underwent septal myectomy from July 2017 to July 2024. The OPIE probe was introduced into the left-ventricular chamber during cardioplegic arrest, with repeated measurements to assess the depth and adequacy of resection. Septal thickness was evaluated pre-myectomy using transthoracic echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, transesophageal echocardiography, and OPIE. Lin's concordance correlation coefficients and Bland-Altman analyses were used to evaluate agreement between modalities. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:A total of 220 patients were included with preoperative thickness ≤2.0, 56 of whom underwent myectomy with OPIE guidance. Preresection transesophageal echocardiography and OPIE demonstrated the strongest agreement of all the imaging modalities (Lin's concordance correlation coefficient, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.72-0.88), with minimal bias (-0.73) and the narrowest limits of agreement (-3.76, +2.31]. OPIE-derived resection thickness estimates were tightly clustered. In the OPIE cohort, there was 1 ventricular septal defect (1.8%) and no 30-day mortality. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:OPIE is a reliable tool for intraoperative assessment of septal thickness, particularly in patients with mild hypertrophy.
PMCID:12881810
PMID: 41658900
ISSN: 2666-2507
CID: 6001632
Mitral Leaflet Shortening as an Ancillary Procedure in Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Swistel, Daniel G; Massera, Daniele; Stepanovic, Alexandra; Adlestein, Elizabeth; Reuter, Maria; Wu, Woon; Scheinerman, Joshua A; Nampi, Robert; Paone, Darien; Kim, Bette; Sherrid, Mark V
BACKGROUND:Mitral leaflet elongation is common in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), contributes to obstructive physiology, and presents a challenge to dual surgical goals of abolition of outflow gradients and mitral regurgitation. Anterior leaflet shortening, performed as an ancillary surgical procedure during myectomy, is controversial. METHODS:This was a retrospective study of all patients undergoing myectomy from 1/2010 to 3/2020 analyzing survival and echocardiographic results. We compared outcomes of patients treated with myectomy and concomitant mitral leaflet shortening with patients treated with myectomy alone. Over this time technique for mitral shortening evolved from anterior leaflet plication to residual leaflet excision (ReLex). RESULTS:Myectomy was performed on 416 patients age 57.5±13.6 years, 204 (49%) female. Average follow up was 5.4±2.8 years. Survival follow-up was complete in 415. Myectomy without valve replacement was performed in 332 patients, of whom 192 had mitral valve shortening (58%). Mitral leaflet plication was performed in 73, ReLex in 151 and both in 32. Hospital mortality for patients undergoing myectomy was 0.7%. At 8 years, cumulative survival was 95% for both myectomy plus leaflet shortening and myectomy alone groups, with no difference in survival between the two. There was no difference in survival between anterior leaflet plication and ReLex groups. Echocardiography 2.5 years after surgery showed a decrease in resting and provoked gradients, mitral regurgitation and left atrial volume and no difference in key variables between ancillary leaflet shortening and myectomy alone patients. CONCLUSIONS:These results affirm that mitral shortening may be an appropriate surgical judgment for selected patients.
PMID: 38518836
ISSN: 1552-6259
CID: 5640912
Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement in a Patient with Very Severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Yeom, Richard; Gorgone, Michelle; Malinovic, Matea; Panzica, Peter; Maslow, Andrew; Augoustides, John G; Marchant, Bryan E; Fernando, Rohesh J; Nampi, Robert G; Pospishil, Liliya; Neuburger, Peter J
PMID: 37657996
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 5618132
Contemporary Practice of Echocardiography in Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement [Editorial]
Pospishil, Liliya; Nampi, Robert G; Neuburger, Peter J
PMID: 34366216
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 5006092
Anesthesiology Research Using Surgical Registries: Consider the Source [Editorial]
Nampi, Robert G; Law, Tina W; Neuburger, Peter J
PMID: 33268278
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 4694262
TAVR Versus SAVR for the Treatment of Aortic Stenosis: Do We Have a Clear Winner? [Editorial]
Nampi, Robert G; Pospishil, Liliya; Neuburger, Peter J
PMID: 32418828
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 4443692
On-pump intracardiac echocardiography during septal myectomy for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Williams, David M; Nampi, Robert G; Saric, Muhamed; Grossi, Eugene A; Sherrid, Mark V; Swistel, Daniel G
PMCID:8298854
PMID: 34317753
ISSN: 2666-2507
CID: 4949552
Can complex mitral valve repair be performed with robotics? An institution's experience utilizing a dedicated team approach in 500 patients
Loulmet, Didier F; Ranganath, Neel K; Neuburger, Peter J; Nampiaparampil, Robert G; Galloway, Aubrey C; Grossi, Eugene A
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:The full potential of robotics has not been achieved in terms of addressing the most challenging mitral valve (MV) cases. We outline our technique and report our early results with totally endoscopic robotic MV repair in a wide range of pathologies. METHODS:From May 2011 to August 2017, a dedicated team attempted totally endoscopic robotic MV repair in 500 MV regurgitation patients. Repair complexity was scored in 3 categories. We analysed our sequential case experience by quartiles. RESULTS:Patient mean age was 60.8 years (range 18-88). Aetiologies included: degenerative 382 (76.4%), functional 37 (7.4%), inflammatory 22 (4.4%) and others 59 (11.8%). Mitral annular calcification was present in 64 (12.8%) cases. Simple MV repair (annuloplasty alone or with 1 leaflet segment repair) was performed in 240 (48%) patients, complex (repair involving more than 1 segment on the same leaflet) in 140 (28%) patients and most complex (bileaflet repair or mitral annular calcification excision with atrioventricular groove repair) in 120 (24%) patients. Concomitant procedures included: left appendage closure (94.8%), patent foramen ovale/atrial septal defect (PFO/ASD) closure (19.6%), cryoablation (19.4%), tricuspid repair (6.2%) or hybrid percutaneous coronary revascularization (7.8%). The overall repair rate was 99.4%, with 0.6% early mortality and 1.2% stroke rate (0.2% permanent neurological deficit). Case complexity increased with our experience. Despite an increase in aortic occlusion and perfusion times (median 86.5 and 125 min) and a slight decrease in operating room extubation rate (overall 64%), length of hospital stay (median 4 days) and 30-day readmission rate (overall 3.6%) were not affected by the progressive inclusion of more complex cases. CONCLUSIONS:Totally endoscopic robotic MV repair performed by a dedicated team allows one to address the entire spectrum of pathological complexity and provides consistent results.
PMID: 30753381
ISSN: 1873-734x
CID: 3656212
Totally endoscopic robotic mitral valve repair in a patient with severe pectus excavatum [Meeting Abstract]
Ranganath, N K; Loulmet, D F; Sadhra, H S; Neragi-Miandoab, S; Nampiaparampil, R G; Galloway, A C; Grossi, E A
Objective: A 63-year-old man with severe asymmetric pectus excavatum (Haller index 3.55) presented with New York Heart Association class I symptoms, severe mitral regurgitation due to flail posterior leaflet, and preserved left ventricular (LV) function. Our goalwas to demonstrate a totally endoscopic robotic-assisted mitral repair.
Patient(s): Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography confirmed severe mitral regurgitation with an anteriorly directed jet due to prolapse of the middle scallop of the posterior leaflet. Four ports were placed in the right chest for the da Vinci Xi surgical system (working, camera, left and right instruments), and cardiopulmonary bypass was instituted via femoral access with arterial and long venous cannulae. While preparing the pericardium, we noted that the right pulmonary veins entered the left atrium leftward of the sternum. An endoclamp was positioned with fluorescent guidance, and antegrade Del Nido cardioplegia was administered. Sondergaard's groove was opened and the left atrial appendage was oversewn with 2 layers of polytetrafluoroethylene sutures. With intracorporeal guidance, a 5th port for an atrial retractor was positioned to the right of the sternum, verifying that it could reach deep enough into the left chest. Analysis of lesions demonstrated a flail P2 leaflet and a globally myxoid mitral valve consistent with Barlow's disease. Although a 0-angle scope provided sufficient visualization of the valve and subvalvular regions, intermittent conflict existed between the instruments and the posterior sternum. A triangular excision of P2 was performed; abnormal chordae were excised below P2, and the defect was closed with polytetrafluoroethylene sutures. A 36-mm posterior annuloplasty band was attached with interrupted 2-0 braided sutures, and hydrostatic testing revealed no residual regurgitation.While the patient was being rewarmed, the endoclamp balloon was deflated while the LV and root were vented. The heart spontaneously returned to sinus rhythm, and the patient was weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass without inotropic support. Postoperative transesophageal echocardiography demonstrated preserved LV function and no residual regurgitation or gradient. The patient was extubated in the operating room and discharged on postoperative day 2.
Conclusion(s): Severe pectus excavatum can make right chest approaches difficult, even in a totally endoscopic robotic approach, but the lack of chest wall disruption allows a speedy recovery
EMBASE:628536168
ISSN: 1559-0879
CID: 4001732