Intensive Care Network Podcasts

Congenital heart disease – Repair or Palliate?

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Sinopse

Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) in infants presents as inadequate systemic or pulmonary blood flow, or heart failure from intra-cardiac shunts. Approaches to surgical intervention comprise primary repair, early palliation with subsequent repair or definitive palliation.  CHD palliation evolved in the pre-cardiopulmonary bypass era. In 1938 a patent ductus arteriosus was ligated, in 1944 pulmonary blood flow was established via subclavian artery to pulmonary artery anastomosis (Blalock, Taussig and Thomas), and in 1952 pulmonary artery banding was employed to protect pulmonary vasculature. In the 1950s-60s symptomatic infants underwent these palliative procedures with reparative intra-cardiac interventions delayed due to perceived risk. In the late 1960s emerging publications shifted the focus to early primary repair.   An exponential increase in the complexity of surgical repairs over the past 50 years have built on early innovation, exemplified by management of transposition of the great arteries. Surgical ap