Echocardiographic and hemodynamic characteristics of atrial septal defects created by percutaneous valvuloplasty
Kronzon I; Tunick PA; Goldfarb A; Freedberg RS; Chinitz L; Slater J; Schwinger ME; Gindea AJ; Glassman E; Daniel WG
Twenty-nine patients were studied by pulsed, continuous wave, and color Doppler before and after percutaneous transseptal valvuloplasty. New atrial septal defects were detected in 14 patients, and the patients were monitored for up to 320 days after the procedure. The diameter of the defect, best evaluated by the transesophageal approach, was 3 to 15 mm. A narrow, high velocity (1.4 to 3.1 meters per second) left-to-right shunt jet was detected in 13 of 14 patients. The shunt jet was continuous in nine of 14 patients, late systolic-holodiastolic in four patients, and bidirectional in one patient. Cardiac catheterization in nine patients confirmed the Doppler findings and demonstrated a peak pressure gradient of 10 to 32 mm Hg between the left and right atria. Oximetry revealed a calculated pulmonary to systemic flow ratio ranging from 2.3:1 in the patient with the largest atrial septal defect by echocardiography to 1:1 (no oxygen saturation step-up) in the patient with the smallest atrial septal defect. In the three patients who underwent cardiac surgery, the operative findings confirmed those of echocardiography. We concluded that atrial septal defects are common after transseptal valvuloplasty. Usually, their relatively small size and the underlying valvular disease that produces high left atrial pressure are responsible for the high pressure gradient between the left and right atria. This results in the high velocity and continuous shunt jet detected by Doppler echocardiography
PMID: 2310594
ISSN: 0894-7317
CID: 63046
High flow velocity across a complicated atrial septal defect: Doppler findings and hemodynamic correlations [Case Report]
Goldfarb A; Chinitz LA; Kronzon I
An unusually high atrial shunt flow velocity pattern was recorded in a patient whose atrial septal defect was created iatrogenically during a transatrial septal approach to aortic valvuloplasty. The flow velocity pattern measured by Doppler echocardiography was predictive of the high transatrial pressure gradient noted later at catheterization
PMID: 3272784
ISSN: 0894-7317
CID: 10967