| Literature DB >> 20204063 |
Eva Welisch1, Knut Kleesiek, Nikolaus Haas, Kambiz Norozi, Ralf Rauch, Guido Filler.
Abstract
Background. Serum concentration of NT-proBNP correlates well with the severity of cardiac disease in adults. Few studies have been performed on the applicability of NT-proBNP for monitoring children with congenital heart disease. Objective. To assess the potential of NT-proBNP for monitoring the success of interventions in children with stenotic cardiac lesions. Methods. NT-proBNP was measured in 42 children aged 1 day to 17 years (y) before and 6 to 12 weeks after surgical or interventional correction of obstructive lesions of the heart. Comparison is made with the clinical status and echocardiographic data of the child. Results. NT-proBNP levels (median 280, range 10-263,000 pg/mL) were above the reference value in all but 6 patients (pts) prior to the intervention. Higher levels were found in more compromised patients. The 35 children with clinical improvement after the procedure showed a decline of their NT-proBNP level in all but 4 patients, whose levels remained unchanged. Five patients with unchanged gradients despite a therapeutic intervention also demonstrated unchanged NT-proBNP levels after the intervention. Thus, the success rate of the procedure correlated well to clinical and echocardiographic findings. Conclusion. NT-proBNP can be used to assess the efficiency of an intervention.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20204063 PMCID: PMC2829620 DOI: 10.1155/2009/241376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Underlying cardiac diagnosis of investigated patients.
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| 29 |
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| Coarctation | 19 |
| Aortic stenosis | 4 |
| Subaortic stenosis | 2 |
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| 17 |
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| Fallot/Pulmonary Atresia after repair with pulmonary artery stenosis or conduit stenosis | 10 |
| Pulmonary valve stenosis | 4 |
| d-Transposition of the Great Arteries after Switch Repair with pulmonary artery stenosis | 2 |
| Midventricular stenosis after ventricular septal defect repair | 1 |
Patient characteristics, clinical and echocardiographic data in median with range.
| Variable (unit) | All patients ( | Left stenosis ( | Right stenosis ( | Symptomatic* ( | Asymptomatic ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age: years (range) | 4.8 (0–17) | 3 (0–16) | 6.5 (0–17) | 4.4 (0–16) | 11.3 (0–17) |
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| Surgical versus catheterization interventions: | 9/33 | 7/18 | 2/15 | 8/19 | 1 /14 |
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| Median peak gradient before intervention (mm Hg per catheterization and/or ECHO in pts scheduled for operation) | 64 (10–120) | 50 (20–125) | 85 (10–120) | 64 (20–120) | 64 (10–125) |
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| Median peak gradient after intervention (mm Hg per catheterization and/or ECHO in patients scheduled for operation) | 10 (0–90) | 0 (0–40) | 36 (0–90) | 10 (0–80) | 20 (0–90) |
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| Median NT-proBNP before (pg/mL) | 280 (10–263000) | 263 (10–263000) | 312 (48–978) | 1570 (120–263.000) | 125 (10–944) |
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| Median NT-proBNP after (pg/mL) | 134 (10–34300) | 117 (20–34300) | 193 (69–490) | 480 (20–34300) | 115 (20–490) |
*Symptomatic: increased modified Ross Score in pts 0–14 y or NYHA in pts > 14 y or arterial hypertension and diminished pulses in patients with coarctation.
Comparison of patients with left-sided obstruction and right-sided obstruction.
| Site of obstruction | Number of patients | NT-proBNP (pg/mL) |
|---|---|---|
| Left Side | Total: 25 | |
| Neonates: 3 | 5437,11487 and 263.000 | |
| 1–12 months: 7 | 204–13.779, median1570 | |
| 1–10 years: 10 | 48–26430, median 108 | |
| Adolescents: 5 | 10–147, median 20 | |
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| Right Side | Total: 17 | |
| Neonates: 2 | 978 and 4290 | |
| 1–12 months: 2 | 239 and 358 | |
| 1–10 years: 6 | 224–944, median 445 | |
| Adolescents: 7 | 48–897, median 183 | |
Clinical score modified from Ross and Reithmann et al. by Laeer et al.
| Score (points) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | |
| History: | |||
| Diaphoresis | Head only | Head and body during exercise | Head and body at rest |
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| Tachypnea | Rare | Several times | Frequent |
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| Physical examination: | |||
| Breathing | normal | Retractions | Dyspnea |
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| Respiratory rate (respirations/min) | |||
| 0–1 y | <50 | 50–60 | >60 |
| 1–6 y | <35 | 35–45 | >45 |
| 7–10 y | <25 | 25–35 | >35 |
| 11–14 y | <18 | 18–28 | >28 |
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| Heart rate (beats/min) | |||
| 0–1 y | <160 | 160–170 | >170 |
| 1–6 y | <105 | 105–115 | >115 |
| 7–10 y | <90 | 90–100 | >100 |
| 11–14 y | <80 | 80–90 | >90 |
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| Hepatomegaly | |||
| (liver edge from right costal margin) | <2 cm | 2–3 cm | >3 cm |
Figure 1The evolution of the actual NT-proBNP values (log 10, pg/mL) before and after intervention to treat a cardiac stenosis. The difference between the values before and after intervention was highly statistically significant using Wilcoxon's matched pairs test (P < .0001).
Figure 2Correlation between change in clinical status and NT-proBNP (log 10, pg/mL).
Figure 3Clinical status and NT-proBNP (log 10, pg/mL) in patients without change after the intervention.
Change of NT-proBNP concentrations (pg/mL) before and after intervention.
| Hemodynamic status | Number of patients | NT-proBNP (pg/mL) (median and range) | Peak gradient (mm Hg) (median and range) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before | After |
| Before | After |
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| Unchanged | 6 | 209 (10–460) | 202 (20–338) | ns | 40 (10–100) | 33 (10–90) | ns |
| Improvement | 35 | 409 (20–263.000) | 145 (20–10.300) | <.0001 | 64 (20–125) | 10 (0–90) | <.0001 |
Unchanged indicates patients with dP <15 mmHg after procedure.