BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is ideal for assessing patients with repaired aortic coarctation (CoA). Little is known on the relation between long-term complications of CoA repair as assessed by CMR and clinical outcome. We examined the prevalence of restenosis and dilatation at the repair site and the long-term outcome in patients with repaired CoA. METHODS AND RESULTS: CMR imaging and clinical data for adult CoA patients (247 patients aged 33.0 ± 12.8 years, 60% male), were analyzed. The diameter of the aorta at the repair site was measured on CMR and its ratio to the aortic diameter at the diaphragm (repair site-diaphragm ratio, RDR) was calculated. Restenosis (RDR≤70%) was present in 31% of patients (and significant in 9% [RDR<50%]), and dilatation (RDR>150%) in 13.0%. A discrete aneurysm at the repair site was observed in 9%. Restenosis was more likely after resection and end-end anastomosis, whereas dilatation after patch repair. Systemic hypertension was present in 69% of patients. Of the hypertensive patients, blood pressure (133 ± 20/73 ± 10 mm Hg) was well controlled in 93% with antihypertensive therapy. Mortality rate over a median length of 5.9 years was low (0.69% per year, 95% CI: 0.33-1.26), but significantly higher than age-matched healthy controls (standardised mortality ratio 2.86, CI 1.43-5.72, p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Restenosis or dilatation at the CoA repair site as assessed by CMR is not uncommon. Medium term survival remains good, however, albeit lower than in the general population. Life-long follow-up and optimal blood pressure control are likely to secure a good longer term outlook in these patients.
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is ideal for assessing patients with repaired aortic coarctation (CoA). Little is known on the relation between long-term complications of CoA repair as assessed by CMR and clinical outcome. We examined the prevalence of restenosis and dilatation at the repair site and the long-term outcome in patients with repaired CoA. METHODS AND RESULTS: CMR imaging and clinical data for adult CoA patients (247 patients aged 33.0 ± 12.8 years, 60% male), were analyzed. The diameter of the aorta at the repair site was measured on CMR and its ratio to the aortic diameter at the diaphragm (repair site-diaphragm ratio, RDR) was calculated. Restenosis (RDR≤70%) was present in 31% of patients (and significant in 9% [RDR<50%]), and dilatation (RDR>150%) in 13.0%. A discrete aneurysm at the repair site was observed in 9%. Restenosis was more likely after resection and end-end anastomosis, whereas dilatation after patch repair. Systemic hypertension was present in 69% of patients. Of the hypertensivepatients, blood pressure (133 ± 20/73 ± 10 mm Hg) was well controlled in 93% with antihypertensive therapy. Mortality rate over a median length of 5.9 years was low (0.69% per year, 95% CI: 0.33-1.26), but significantly higher than age-matched healthy controls (standardised mortality ratio 2.86, CI 1.43-5.72, p<0.001). CONCLUSION:Restenosis or dilatation at the CoA repair site as assessed by CMR is not uncommon. Medium term survival remains good, however, albeit lower than in the general population. Life-long follow-up and optimal blood pressure control are likely to secure a good longer term outlook in these patients.
Authors: Fabian Rengier; Michael Delles; Joachim Eichhorn; Yoo-Jin Azad; Hendrik von Tengg-Kobligk; Julia Ley-Zaporozhan; Rüdiger Dillmann; Hans-Ulrich Kauczor; Roland Unterhinninghofen; Sebastian Ley Journal: Int J Cardiovasc Imaging Date: 2015-02-03 Impact factor: 2.357
Authors: Ami B Bhatt; Maria R Lantin-Hermoso; Curt J Daniels; Robert Jaquiss; Benjamin John Landis; Bradley S Marino; Rahul H Rathod; Robert N Vincent; Bradley B Keller; Juan Villafane Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med Date: 2022-05-25
Authors: Tim Somers; Hedwig M J M Nies; Roland R J van Kimmenade; Dennis G H Bosboom; Guillaume S C Geuzebroek; Wim J Morshuis Journal: Eur Heart J Case Rep Date: 2022-02-16