| Literature DB >> 35962873 |
Santosh Kumar Sinha1, Mahmodullah M Razi1, Najeeb Ullah Sofi2, Manoj Kumar Rohit3, Umeshwar Pandey1, Awadhesh Kumar Sharma1, Mohit Sachan1, Puneet Aggarwal4, Mukesh Jha5, Praveen Shukla1, Ramesh Thakur1, Vinay Krishna6, Rakesh Kumar Verma6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Atrial septal defect (ASD) is one of the common congenital heart defects. Its management has transformed dramatically in the last 4 decades with the transition from surgical to percutaneous transcatheter closure for most secundum-type ASDs. Various devices are available for transcatheter closure of ASD with Amplatzer atrial septal occluder being most commonly used worldwide. Cocoon septal occlude has a nanocoating of platinum using nano-fusion technology over nitinol framework that imparts better radiopacity and excellent biocompatibility and prevents leaching of nickel into circulation, and by smoothening nitinol wire makes this device very soft and smooth. The aim of this study was to evaluate feasibility, effectiveness, safety, and long-term outcome of transcatheter closure of ASD using Cocoon septal occluder (Vascular Innovation, Thailand).Entities:
Keywords: Amplatzer septal occluder; Atrial septal defect; Cocoon septal occluder; Embolization; Transcatheter closure; Transesophageal echo
Year: 2022 PMID: 35962873 PMCID: PMC9375781 DOI: 10.1186/s43044-022-00298-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Egypt Heart J ISSN: 1110-2608
Fig. 1Cocoon septal occluder is a self-expandable, dual-disk structure which is composed of platinum-coated nitinol wire. A Left atrial disk; B right atrial disk
Fig. 2Cocoon septal occlude (CSO) is filled with three polypropylene woven fabrics (A); pin vice connector of CSO (B)
Fig. 3Sizing balloon showing indentation on fluoroscope once inflated with diluted saline contrast after positioning it across the defect and indentation was measured
Fig. 4Device deployment using LUPV technique. (A Delivery sheath positioned in LUPV; B LA disk of device was uncovered and once got snugly fit, RA disk of device was released by gradually pulling the sheath further; C Minnesota maneuver was performed to ensure properly sitting disks across defect; D device position on AP view; E device position on LAO view)
Fig. 5Device deployment using RUPV technique. (A Delivery sheath positioned in RUPV; B device was loaded inside sheath which was still kept in RUPV; C properly positioned disk across the defect)
Fig. 6Device position on LAO view prior (A) and post-release (B)
Fig. 7Device deployment using BAT technique. (A Equalizer balloon was inflated in RA touching the septum over the wire which was parked in LUPV, while the sheath was placed over the wire parked in RUPV; B left disk was partially opened just outside RUPV; C sheath was quickly pulled to open its remaining part)
Fig. 8Device deployment using BAT technique. (A Waist and right disk are quickly deployed after retracting the sheath into RA; B properly opened disks; C Minnesota maneuver was performed to check the stability of the device)
Fig. 9TEE showing proper placement of device with disks catching the rim properly (A;B) and post-deployment residual shunts (B)
Baseline demographic and clinical presentation of patients (N = 320)
| Characteristics | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Sex (female/male) | 238(74%)/82(26%) |
| Age (years) | 14.6 ± 3.1(6–29) |
| Clinical indications | |
| a. Right ventricular overload | 320(100%) |
| b. Failure to thrive | 81(25.3%) |
| c. Recurrent respiratory tract infection | 73(22.8%) |
| d. Exercise intolerance | 57(17.8%) |
| e. Pulmonary hypertension | 13(4.1%) |
| f. Palpitation | 9(2.8%) |
| Rhythm | |
| a. Sinus rhythm | 313(97.8%) |
| b. Atrial fibrillation (AFib) | 5(1.5%) |
| Deficient rims (< 5 mm) | 52(16.2%) |
| a. Posterior | 14(4.3%) |
| b. Aortic | 33(10.3%) |
| c. Superior | 5(1.2%) |
| d. Inferior | 0(0) |
| Absent aortic rim | 11(3.4%) |
| Weight (kg) | 30.2 ± 5.4(10–53) |
| Pulmonary vs. systemic flow (Qp/Qs) | 2.6(1.4–3.6) |
| Associated disease | 7(2.1%) |
| a. Rheumatic mitral stenosis | 2(0.6%) |
| b. Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) | 3(0.9) |
| c. Ventricular septal defect (VSD) | 2(0.6%) |
| Normal situs solitus | 317(99%) |
| Situs inversus | 3(1%) |
Procedure characteristics and outcome of transcatheter closure of atrial septal defect (N = 320)
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Efficacy | 312(97.5%) |
| Safety | 312(97.5%) |
| Transthoracic guidance (TTE) | 298(93.1%) |
| Transesophageal guidance (TEE) | 22(6.9%) |
| Mean diameter of ASD (mm) | 21.4 ± 5(12–36) |
| Mean diameter of the device (mm) | 26.9 ± 4.2(14–40) |
| Balloon Sizing | 26(8.1%) |
| Size difference | 5.5 ± 2.6 |
| Technique of deployment | |
| a. LUPV technique | 234(73.1%) |
| b. RUPV technique | 42(13.1%) |
| c. Balloon-assisted technique | 9(2.8%) |
| d. Greek maneuver | 35(10.9%) |
| Procedural time (mins) | 23.5 ± 9.2(20—58) |
| Fluoroscopy time (mins) | 6.8 ± 10.4(3.5–21) |
| Periprocedural complications | 27(8.4%) |
| a. Cardiac death | 0(0) |
| b. Device embolization | 2(0.6%) |
| c. Cardiac perforation (CP) | 1(0.3%) |
| d. Pericardial effusion (PE) | 3(0.9%) |
| e. Transient supraventricular arrhythmias | 15(4.6%) |
| f. Transient atrioventricular block | 6(1.8%) |
| g. Local site hematoma | 0(0) |
| i. Stroke | 0(0) |
| Transient headache | 8(2.5%) |
| Follow-up | |
| a. Late embolization | 0(0) |
| b. Erosion | 0(0) |
| c. Residual shunting at 6 months of follow-up | 2(0.6%) |
| d. Nickel allergy | 0(0) |
| Follow-up duration (months) | 50.92 (12.5–89) |
| Hospital stay (hours) | 29.4 |
Fig. 10Dislodged device into right ventricle (A) in a patient with very large defect (B) who underwent surgery (C dislodged device)