D Grandmougin

Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Lille, Lille, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France

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Publications (15)71.17 Total impact

  • Article: Anterior chordal transection impairs not only regional left ventricular function but also regional right ventricular function in mitral regurgitation.
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    ABSTRACT: Preservation of annuloventricular continuity through the chordae tendinae aims to maintain left ventricular (LV) function and thus improve postoperative prognosis. This study was designed to prospectively investigate the effect of anterior chordal transection on global and regional LV and right ventricular (RV) function in mitral regurgitation (MR). Sixty-five patients with severe MR underwent radionuclide angiography before and after either mitral valve (MV) repair (42 patients) or replacement with anterior chordal transection (23 patients). LV and RV ejection fractions (EF) were determined at rest. Both ventricles were divided into 9 regions to analyze regional EF and the effect of anteromedial translation related to surgery. After surgery there was a significant decrease in LVEF (P=0.038) and an increase in RVEF (P=0.036). However, LVEF did not change after MV repair (63.8+/-9.9% to 62.6+/-10.3%), whereas RVEF improved (40.7+/-10.1% to 44.5+/-8.1%, P=0.027). In contrast, LVEF decreased after MV replacement (61.7+/-10.1% to 57.2+/-9.9%, P=0.03), and RVEF was unchanged (40.9+/-10.9% to 41.3+/-9.1%). LVEF 4 and 5, in the area of anterior papillary muscle insertion, were impaired after MV replacement compared with MV repair (region 4, 77.6+/-16.7% versus 87.7+/-10.8%, P=0.005, and region 5, 73.9+/-19.3% versus 89.9+/-13.1%, P<0.001). Moreover, anterior chordal transection led to a significant impairment in the apicoseptal region of the RV (RVEF 4, 50.3+/-15.6% versus 59.3+/-13.8%, P=0.02). Anterior chordal transection during MV replacement for MR impairs not only regional LV function but also regional RV function.
    Circulation 09/2001; 104(12 Suppl 1):I41-6. · 14.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Total orthotopic heart transplantation for primary cardiac rhabdomyosarcoma: factors influencing long-term survival.
    D Grandmougin, G Fayad, C Decoene, A Pol, H Warembourg
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    ABSTRACT: Primary cardiac sarcomas are uncommon and rare, with an unequal distribution in the population. A dismal prognosis is usually admitted that is related to a high propensity to develop distant metastasis with survival rarely exceeding 2 years. We report a case of a patient with a primary cardiac rhabdomyosarcoma characterized by an exceptional long-term survival after surgical treatment by a total orthotopic heart transplantation. From this limited experience, we reviewed factors that may influence survival to optimize therapeutic strategy. A 33-year-old man was found to have a 10-cm primary cardiac rhabdomyosarcoma located in the right atrium and extending to the atrioventricular groove; therefore, resection was not possible. Since no metastases were detected, the patient was scheduled for urgent cardiac transplantation, which was performed after adjuvant radiotherapy. Postoperative outcome was uneventful and the patient is still alive, with regular follow-up, at 102 months. In a case of primary rhabdomyosarcoma, heart transplantation, despite immunosuppressive therapy, can provide long-term survival and can be considered for selected patients after rigorous analysis of predictors of survival.
    The Annals of Thoracic Surgery 06/2001; 71(5):1438-41. · 3.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cardiac valve papillary fibroelastomas: clinical, histological and immunohistochemical studies and a physiopathogenic hypothesis.
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    ABSTRACT: Cardiac papillary fibroelastoma (CPF) is a rare and histologically benign tumor, but may have a malignant propensity for life-threatening complications; thus, surgical removal is justified. Case histories were reviewed of four patients who underwent surgical management after diagnosis of CPF located on aortic (n = 2) or mitral (n = 2) valves. Our aim was to provide explanations for the clinical diversity of the lesions and, using histological and immunohistochemical methods, to hypothesize the genesis of these tumors. Among four patients with a diagnosis of valvular CPF, two had previous and recent history of neurological embolic symptoms with small echographically located tumors attached to the ventricular side of aortic cusps. Two other patients (one with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, one with no neurological or rhythmically related stroke) had CPFs located on the posterior or anterior mitral leaflets. Surgical excision was performed with a conservative valve-sparing approach. Histological and specific immunohistochemical (IHC) studies were conducted on all samples. The postoperative course was uneventful, and histological analysis confirmed the diagnosis of CPF with typical fronds characterized by three successive layers. In the first two patients there was correlation between neurological events and the presence of thrombus aggregated on the injured superficial endothelial layer. In the other patients, no endothelial damage or thrombus was found. IHC studies showed dysfunction of the superficial endothelium, a centrifugal mesenchymal cellular migration arising from the central layer to the superficial layer with differentiation steps, the presence of dendritic cells in the intermediate layer, and remnants of cytomegalovirus (CMV) in the intermediate layer. Despite their benign histological aspect, and independent of their size, CPFs justify surgical excision because of their high potential to systemic embolization. In most cases, valve sparing management is possible with no observed recurrence after complete excision. The presence of dendritic cells and CMV strongly suggests the possibility of a virus-induced tumor, therefore evoking the concept of a chronic form of viral endocarditis.
    The Journal of heart valve disease 12/2000; 9(6):832-41. · 0.81 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chronic amiodarone effects on epicardial conduction and repolarization in the isolated porcine heart.
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    ABSTRACT: Amiodarone is a potent antiarrhythmic agent with complex chronic effects, notably on repolarization and conduction, that are not fully understood. Its low arrhythmogenic potential has been related to a lack of increase in repolarization dispersion. Since its effects are not documented in pigs we conducted a mapping study of activation and repolarization in isolated perfused porcine hearts. Amio20 female pigs (n = 7) received amiodarone 20 mg/kg per day over 4 weeks while Amio50 female pigs (n = 7) received 50 mg/kg per day over 4 weeks. Concentrations of the drug encompassed values found in clinical studies. Then, activation patterns and activation-to-recovery intervals (ARI) were mapped epicardially from 128 unipolar electrograms in isolated perfused hearts in corroboration of epicardial action potential recordings. Mean ARI was longer in Amio20 experiments compared to the seven control hearts (325 +/- 11 ms vs 288 +/- 5 ms at 1,000 ms), whereas ARI dispersion was not different, being comprised between 7 and 11 ms and generating smooth gradients. In Amio50 experiments, mean ARI was further prolonged (390 +/- 10 ms at 1,500 ms) with an exaggerated reverse rate dependence concomitant with a depressant effect on the plateau of the action potential. Again, ARI dispersion did not differ from controls. Finally, the drug depressed the maximal rate of depolarization (Vmax) and slowed conduction in a rate dependent and concentration dependent fashion. In conclusion, chronic amiodarone induces Class I and Class III antiarrhythmic effects in ventricular porcine epicardium that are concentration dependent but does not affect dispersion of repolarization. This may partly explain its low arrhythmogenic potential.
    Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology 08/2000; 23(7):1133-43. · 1.35 Impact Factor
  • Article: Multiple aneurysmal dysplasia of pulmonary valvular sinuses with congenital focal aplasia of the annulus.
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    ABSTRACT: We report the case of a 22-year-old woman in whom a focal aplasia of the pulmonary valve annulus associated with a multiple aneurysmal compensatory dysplasia was found. This patient had been followed since the age of seven years for a congenital asymmetric hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Cardiac Doppler analysis showed significant pulmonary valvular insufficiency. The patient underwent heart transplant surgery because of total and refractory cardiac insufficiency. Pathological examination of the explanted heart (at the European Homograft Bank) enabled us to describe this valvular malformation. To date, this anomaly has not been described in the literature. Whether it is a malformation discovered fortuitously, or whether it is responsible in part for some of the signs associated with congenital hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is unclear. However, its role might be disclosed by a rigorous investigation of the patient's family.
    The Journal of heart valve disease 11/1999; 8(6):708-10. · 0.81 Impact Factor
  • Article: Mid-term comparative follow-up after aortic valve replacement with Carpentier-Edwards and Pericarbon pericardial prostheses.
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    ABSTRACT: The first generation of pericardial valves had a high rate of premature deterioration. The aim of this study was to compare the outcome after aortic valve replacement with second generation pericardial prostheses (Pericarbon and Carpentier-Edwards). Between 1987 and 1994, 162 patients underwent aortic valve replacement with either a Pericarbon (n=81, 69+/-11 years) or a Carpentier-Edwards (n=81, 70+/-11 years) pericardial prosthesis. Mean follow-up was 4.4+/-2.7 years for Pericarbon and 4.8+/-2.4 years for Carpentier-Edwards valves (P=0. 27), giving a total follow-up of 745 patient-years. Thirty-day mortality and 5-year actuarial survival were, respectively, 6.2% and 63.2+/-5.7% in the Pericarbon group and 6.2% and 63.5+/-5.6% in the Carpentier-Edwards group. At 8 years, freedom from (and linearized rates per patient-year) thromboembolism, structural failure, and all valve-related events were, respectively, 91.8+/-3.6% (1.4%), 76. 9+/-8.7% (2.5%), and 58.4+/-9.3% (5.6%) in the Pericarbon group and 94.4+/-2.7% (1%), 100% (0%, P<0.01), and 88.8+/-3.7% (2%, P<0.05) in the Carpentier-Edwards group. There were 9 (11.1%) Pericarbon structural failures related predominantly to severe calcification and stenosis. The actual reoperation rate was 7.4% (1.6% per patient-year) in the Pericarbon group for fibrocalcific degeneration (n=3), periprosthetic leak (n=1), endocarditis (n=1), and aortic dissection (n=1). There was neither structural valve failure nor valve reoperation in the Carpentier-Edwards group. Echocardiographic review of 70 patients from 85 survivors (82.3%) found 4 additional Pericarbon valves with signs of early structural failure but no Carpentier-Edwards valve with such changes. Eight years after aortic valve replacement, Pericarbon pericardial prostheses compared unfavorably with Carpentier-Edwards pericardial prostheses, with a high incidence of structural valve failure and reoperation.
    Circulation 11/1999; 100(19 Suppl):II11-6. · 14.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Ventricular tachycardia originating from the posteroseptal process of the left ventricle with inferior wall healed myocardial infarction.
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    ABSTRACT: Ventricular tachycardia (VT) substrates may form in preferential locations and similar electrocardiographic patterns may be observed when ventricular activation starts from a particular site. We examined the role of the posterior inferior process of the left ventricle in the mechanism of VT occurring after inferior wall myocardial infarction. We reviewed isochronal maps of 40 VTs obtained at surgery in 13 patients, with a 128-electrode system using epicardial sock and endocardial balloon electrode arrays. Based on the epicardial to left endocardial relation we observed 7 tachycardias in 7 patients with onset of activation over the crux of the heart. This activation mimicked excitation through a posteroseptal accessory pathway. Endocardial activation maps showed breakthroughs occurring 6 to 40 ms later and did not give evidence in favor of macroreentry. In all but 1 VT, left-axis deviation was present (-30 to -75 degrees) with a positive concordance from leads V2 to V6 (QRS wave patterns were variable in V1). These tachycardias, which were clinical in 3 of 7 cases, were interpreted as arising from the posterior inferior process of the left ventricle and successfully ablated by left septal and epicardial cryolesions. In another patient, this concept was further validated by percutaneous radiofrequency ablation of a tachycardia with the previously described morphology. In conclusion, VT may originate from the posteroseptal process of the left ventricle with inferior wall healed myocardial infarction. Because these tachycardias can be successfully eliminated, their characteristic morphologies may provide clinical markers for the identification of patient candidates to surgical or nonsurgical ablative therapy.
    The American Journal of Cardiology 08/1999; 84(2):181-6. · 3.37 Impact Factor
  • Article: Acute aortic endocarditis with annular destruction: assessment of surgical treatment with cryopreserved valvular homografts.
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    ABSTRACT: Valve ring abscesses in acute infective aortic endocarditis have a low, though not insignificant, prevalence. Surgical treatment with implantation of prosthetic valves may lead to major life-threatening complications, such as recurrent endocarditis and partial or complete prosthetic dislocation. Valvular homografts may offer a higher resistance to recurrent infection and have thus become recognized as an excellent and safe substitute for orthotopic left ventricular outflow reconstruction. Between May 1991 and July 1996, 25 patients underwent surgical treatment for aortic endocarditis with annular destruction. Staphylococcus spp. were present in 32% of patients and Streptococcus spp. in 48%. Seven aortic valve replacements (AVR) and 18 aortic root replacements (ARR) were performed using cryopreserved valvular homografts. All grafts were implanted in the subannular position. The overall outcome was good in 23 patients, two died in the early postoperative period. Mean follow up was 38 +/- 18 months (range: 14 to 76 months). No recurrence of endocarditis was detected and no significant alterations of the implants were described. Transvalvular gradients were significantly lower in ARR patients than in AVR patients. Despite the severity of the tissue damage, cryopreserved homografts, when implanted in the subannular position, constitute a safe and reproducible surgical treatment of aortic endocarditis with annular involvement.
    The Journal of heart valve disease 06/1999; 8(3):234-41. · 0.81 Impact Factor
  • Article: Factors affecting epicardial dispersion of repolarization: a mapping study in the isolated porcine heart.
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    ABSTRACT: Non-uniform drug-induced prolongation of repolarization predominating in the midmyocardial (M) cell layers has been shown to be responsible for perpetuation of reentry, giving rise to torsade de pointes. However, the absence of M cells in immature animals, especially the pig, suggests other possible underlying mechanisms. We sought to examine, in this species, the effects of predisposing factors to torsade de pointes on the dispersion of epicardial repolarization and their contribution to arrhythmogenesis. Computerized mapping of repolarization and activation was conducted on the epicardial surface in 29 Langendorff-perfused hearts of eight-week-old pigs. Activation-recovery intervals were measured simultaneously from 128 unipolar electrograms. Baseline iso-interval maps were dipolar (41%) or multipolar (59%). Dispersion of repolarization was reverse frequency-dependent but was unaffected by lowering [K+]o. DL-Sotalol (0.1 mmol/l) reinforced local gradients and thus increased epicardial dispersion, whereas intramural recordings did not demonstrate any predominant effect in midmyocardial layers. Phenylephrine (1 mumol/l) notably augmented DL-sotalol effects. After [Mg++]o lowering, although dispersion was not significantly increased, DL-sotalol was associated with the spontaneous occurrence of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia in seven out of nine experiments. When maps of repolarization of escape beats were compared with activation maps of first arrhythmic beats, an arc of functional dissociation was observed in the vicinity of a steep gradient of repolarization in two out of nine tachycardias. Epicardial dispersion of repolarization is increased by slow rates, DL-sotalol and phenylephrine but is not the only requirement for initiation of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia. In combination with other factors, it helps continuation of the arrhythmia in this model.
    Cardiovascular Research 04/1999; 41(3):563-74. · 6.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: Aortic root replacement with a pulmonary autograft in young adults: medium-term results in 70 patients.
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    ABSTRACT: Pulmonary autograft aortic valve replacement has been introduced in our institution in selected adult patients in light of the known disadvantages and limitations of conventional prosthetic valves. We prospectively evaluated the use of the pulmonary autograft in a series of 70 young adults (31.2+/-8.7 years, range 16 to 49 years) operated on from March 1992 to April 1997 with aortic root replacement only. There were no in-hospital deaths and two noncardiac-related late deaths during follow-up of up to 62 months (mean 33 months). Thromboembolic complications were not observed. One patient required reoperation for infective endocarditis 4.3 years after surgery. Discharge echo-Doppler studies showed normal autograft and allograft valve function. Serial echo-Doppler studies showed no significant progression of aortic insufficiency and no dilatation of the autograft. A severe stenosis of the pulmonary allograft developed in 1 patient. Aortic root replacement with a pulmonary autograft, although more complex than conventional prosthetic valve replacement, is a safe, effective, and reproducible procedure in properly selected adult patients. Long-term results remain to be evaluated.
    The Annals of Thoracic Surgery 01/1999; 66(6 Suppl):S148-52. · 3.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Long-term results with the Sorin Pericarbon valve in the aortic position: a multicenter study.
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    ABSTRACT: A multicenter study was designed to evaluate the Pericarbon pericardial bioprosthesis for up 10 years after implantation in the aortic position. Between January 1986 and November 1996, 321 patients (mean age 75.8 +/- 7.3 years) received 325 Pericarbon pericardial valves in the aortic position. Four patients underwent redo surgery and each received a second Pericarbon prosthesis. Associated cardiac procedures in 80 patients were mainly coronary bypass (n = 66). Follow up extended up to 10 years (cumulative follow up of 931.0 patient-years; mean follow up 3.1 +/- 2.2 years). There were 19 late deaths, with seven valve-related. Twelve patients suffered an embolic complication (transient cerebral attack in four, peripheral in six and induction of a myocardial infarction in two). Of these complications, five occurred within 30 days of surgery and seven beyond the first year. Ten patients were reoperated on, six for primary tissue failure, two for prosthetic endocarditis and two for paraprosthetic leak. Primary failure was due in all cases to leaflet mineralization. No primary tear of the leaflet was reported. Actuarial freedom after 10 years from primary tissue failure was 83.9 +/- 7.4% and from major embolic events 97.6 +/- 1.0%. Freedom from valve-related mortality at 10 years was 92.1 +/- 4.9%. These results indicate that, over a period of up to 10 years, the Pericarbon pericardial bioprosthesis compares favorably with other replacement valves.
    The Journal of heart valve disease 06/1998; 7(3):278-82. · 0.81 Impact Factor
  • Article: Successful treatment of primary pneumococcal multilocular mycotic aneurysms.
    D Grandmougin, H Warembourg, G Fayad
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    ABSTRACT: We report the case of a patient with five primary pneumococcal multilocular mycotic aneurysms located in the left femoral artery, the descending thoracic aorta and the right internal iliac artery. A successful treatment combining three different procedures was performed, including the use of two cryopreserved thoracic homografts. At a 54-month follow-up, the patient is alive and leads a normal life. Regular evaluation including computed tomographic scans of the thorax and abdomen showed no recurrence of infectious aneurysmal process. Moreover, this latter examination confirmed no dilatation nor significant calcifications of the thoracic arterial allograft, though chest roentgenogram showed discrete calcifications along the borders at the 50th month.
    European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery 08/1997; 12(1):133-7. · 2.55 Impact Factor
  • Article: Systemic infection related to endocarditis on pacemaker leads: clinical presentation and management.
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    ABSTRACT: Endocarditis related to pacemaker (PM)-lead infection is a rare but serious complication of permanent transvenous pacing. To determine in which situations the diagnosis should be evoked and to determine optimal management, we reviewed our experience with endocarditis related to PM-lead infection. Fifty-two patients were admitted for endocarditis related to PM-lead infection. The presentation was acute in 14 patients, with onset of symptoms in the first 6 weeks after the last procedure on the implant site, and chronic in 38 patients. Fever occurred in 86.5%. Clinical and/or radiological evidences of pulmonary involvement were observed in 38.4%. Pulmonary scintigraphy disclosed pulmonary infarcts in 31.2%. Local complications were found in 51.9%. Elevated C-reactive protein was found in 96.2%. A germ was isolated in 88.4% of patients and was a Staphylococcus in 93.5%. Transthoracic echocardiography demonstrated vegetations in only 23% of patients, whereas transesophageal echocardiography disclosed abnormal appearances on the PM lead in 94%. We systematically tried to ablate all the material. Two techniques were used: percutaneous ablation or surgical removal during extracorporeal circulation. All patients were treated with antibiotics after removal of the infected material. Two patients died before lead removal and 2 after surgical removal; the predischarge mortality was 7.6%, and the overall mortality was 26.9% after a follow-up of 20.1+/-13 months. The diagnosis of endocarditis related to PM-lead infection should be suspected in the presence of fever, complications, or pulmonary lesions after PM insertion. Transesophageal echocardiography should be performed to look for vegetations. Staphylococci are involved in the majority of these infections. The endocardial system must be entirely removed and appropriate antibiotic therapy pursued for 6 weeks.
    Circulation 05/1997; 95(8):2098-107. · 14.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Surgical management of ventricular arrhythmia after myocardial infarction].
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    ABSTRACT: From December 1986 to December 1994, 36 patients underwent surgical treatments for intractable ventricular tachyarrhythmias after myocardial infarction. Preoperative electrophysiological studies confirmed inducibility of sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia and its resistance to antiarrhythmic drugs in all patients, 2 different concepts were assessed: 1) 22 non-guided surgical procedures were performed. 17 patients underwent Encircling thermic exclusion by Nd-Yag laser beam (Group A) and 5 patients underwent extended cryoablations (n = 5) with endocardial resections. Mean preoperative value of left ventricular function in Groups A and B were 35.23% and 30.20% respectively. 10 coronary bypasses (Group A: n = 8; Group B: n = 2) and 1 mitral valve replacement (Group A) were also performed. Perioperative mortality was 5.5% in Group A. No perioperative deaths occurred in Group B. Ventricular tachycardias recurred spontaneously in 2 patients (Group A) and 7 remained inducible after evaluation by electrophysiological studies. 2) 14 patients underwent extended cryoablations guided by intraoperative cardiac mapping, including endocardial resections in all cases. Mean preoperative value of left ventricular function was 32.80%. Mitral valve replacements were achieved in 2 cases, 1 perioperative death occurred (7.14%). Clinical recurrence of ventricular tachycardias concerned 1 patient (7.69%) and 2 remained inducible after electrophysiological studies (15.38%). We conclude that the better results obtained with cardiac mapping and cryoablations may be due to available detection and destruction of deep septal arrhythmogenic substrates. Moreover, cryoablation creates a nonarrhythmogenic scar and can be performed in papillary muscles while preserving the structure of the tissue. No postoperative alteration of left ventricular function was therefore observed.
    Annales de Chirurgie 02/1996; 50(5):381-9. · 0.35 Impact Factor
  • Article: Banking cryopreserved heart valves in Europe: assessment of a 5-year operation in an international tissue bank in Brussels.
    Y Goffin, D Grandmougin, B Van Hoeck
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    ABSTRACT: The heart valve bank of the European Homograft Bank has been set up in 1988 to meet the growing demand of cardiac surgeons for various sized and quality controlled cryopreserved homografts. Heart valve donors less than 60 years of age were classified in 3 categories: multiorgan donors with non transplantable hearts, recipients of cardiac transplantation and non beating heart cadavers with a warm ischemic time of less than 6 hours. Past history and biology were checked for transmissible diseases. Preparation, progressive freezing and storage in liquid nitrogen vapors, and quality control were according to the standards of the Belgian Ministry of Health. From end January 1989 to end May 1994, 989 homograft valves were cryopreserved (514 pulmonary, 475 aortic and 3 mitral) whereas 962 valves were discarded. The first cause of rejection being a major macroscopic lesion (41.48%). 138 hearts accepted at inspection were contaminated and 43 cases remained so after antibiotics. 38 cases were positive for hepatitis B or C. Complication at distribution and thawing included 10 instances of bag rupture and 15 of transversal fracture through the wall of the conduit. 477 aortic, 474 pulmonary valves as well as one mitral were implanted between May 1989 and May 1994, either for left or right ventricular outflow tract reconstruction. In the left ventricular outflow tract series 111 aortic and 23 pulmonary homograft valves were used in cases of native endocarditis, prosthetic endocarditis or recurrent endocarditis after homograft implantation. 9.6% of the requests could no be satisfied. Regular follow up information was available from 382 implants-40.1% only. The assessment of 5 years operation of the heart valve bank indicates: 1) the efficiency of selecting, cryopreserving and allocating quality controlled homograft valves from a large pool of donor hearts provided by a network of hospitals; 2) the difficulty of obtaining regular follow up information on the implants.
    European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery 02/1996; 10(7):505-12. · 2.55 Impact Factor