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Long-term outcome of intracardiac repair under simple deep hypothermia.

Development of cardiopulmonary bypass has contributed to pediatric cardiac surgery, but at the dawn of cardiac surgery, simple deep hypothermia was used to avoid the deleterious effect of cardiopulmonary bypass. Between 1981 and 1990, 45 patients with simple cardiac anomalies underwent definitive surgery under deep hypothermia. Age at operation was 35 days to 20 months, and body weight was 2.3 to 8.0 kg. Under morphine and ether anesthesia, a median sternotomy was performed when the esophageal temperature reached 26.3 degrees C +/- 1.3 degrees C by the application of surface cooling. At a minimum esophageal temperature of 19.6 degrees C +/- 2.3 degrees C, inflow occlusion and cold cardioplegia were applied to induce circulatory arrest for 32.4 +/- 10.2 min. Direct cardiac massage was used to restore cardiac activity during rewarming. All but one patient was in New York Heart Association functional class I postoperatively. The latest cardiothoracic ratio was 49.8% +/- 4.7%. All but 2 patients are free from medication. Five of 30 patients showed developmental delay in the long-term; 2 of these had a long circulatory arrest period, and 3 had prolonged heart failure postoperatively. The other 25 patients had excellent physiologic and mental development. The long-term outcome of perfusionless hypothermic cardiac surgery is satisfactory when applied appropriately.

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