Department of Cardiology, Grant Govt Medical College and Sir JJ group of hospitals, Maharashtra, India
Corresponding author details:
Aniruddha kaushik
Department of Cardiology
Grant Govt Medical College and Sir JJ group of hospitals
Maharashtra,India
Copyright:
© 2020 Kaushik A, et al.
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Patent Ductus Arteiosus (PDA) is a common Acyanotic congenital Heart disease but its
association with Aortic Stenosis (AS) is rare beyond the neonatal period. Here we present
a rare case of PDA associated with Aortic Stenosis with Aortic regurgitation (AR) and its
treatment plan based on hemodynamic.
Aortic Stenosis; Aortic Regurgitation; Cardiovascular Examination; Hemodynamic
PDA is one of the common Acyanotic congenital Heart disease found in children but
its association with the aortic valve disease is less frequent beyond the neonatal period
[1-3]. This finding is important so that while planning for the surgical management of LVOT
obstruction, PDA should not be missed. We here by present a case of a patient who presented
with cardiac failure and was diagnosed with PDA with severe AS and moderate AR.
A 5 yr old male child presented with failure to thrive with congestive heart failure. On
examination no e/o dysmorphism present and Heart rate was 134/min with collapsing
pulse in all four limbs. Saturation in all four limbs was 95% with pulse oxymetry.
Anthropometric examination showed weight below third percentile with height percentile
between 25th-50th centile. Cardiovascular examination showed Hyper dynamic precordium
on auscultation continuous murmur in left 2nd intercostal area below clavicle where as
in right second intercostal space ejection systolic (IV/VI grade), a grade II/IV diastolic
murmur present in the right 3rd intercostal space .Respiratory examination revealed
b/l wheeze in lower zone. Other systemic examination was within normal limit. On
investigation Complete Blood count revealed Hemoglobin was 11.8 with total leucocytes
count 11,000 and platelet count 1.6lakhs. X-ray chest s/o cardiomegaly (CT ratio >0.55)
with bulging at Aortopulmonary conus suggestive of left atrial enlargement along with
features of Left ventricular hypertrophy and cephalisation of pulmonary venous system.
Echocardiography examination showed dilated left ventricle with turbulence across aortic
valve with peak by mean gradient of 72/40mmhg across AV with AVmax of 4.2m/s with
AR PHT 385. Basal short axis view showed normal aortic valve (3 Cusps) and 6mm of PDA
with Left to right shunt (Figure 1-3). This was a challenging case to decide which lesion
to operate first, as patient was Haemodynamically unstable. after discussion with parents
about dual lesion we have decided to go ahead with staged procedure with PDA to be closed
with the device as Left ventricle was much dilated as compared to hypertrophied and
during cardiac catheterization there was a significant reduction of the AV gradient during
the procedure itself suggesting that the increased gradient which we were getting was
mostly flow related. Hence we had closed PDA with PDA device Cocoon 8/10mm (Figure
4,5). Gradually patient Haemodynamically improved. 1 week after PDA Device closure
repeat echo showed significant reduction in gradient across aortic valve with peak by mean
gradient of 30/15mmhg with AR PHT of 534 s/o mild AS with mild AR, with no shunt across PDA device. Patient symptoms improved significantly hence decided
for medical management and closed follow up for aortic lesion.
Follow-up echo after one month of PDA closure shows regression of
LV size with gradient of 26/11mmHg across AV with trivial Aortic
regurgitation (Figure 6,7).
Figure 1: M mode echocardiogrphic image showing dilated LV (z
score >2 SD)
Figure 2: Parasternal long axis view showing gradient across
aortic valve
Figure 3: Parasternal basal short axis view showing PDA size
6mm
Figure 4: Angiographic View (lateral) showing communication
between Aorta and Pulmonary Artery (PDA)
Figure 5: Angiographic view (lateral) showing PDA device
(cocoon 8/10mm) insitu with no flow across PDA
Figure 6: M Mode Echo cardio graphic image showing decrease
LV dimension 1 month after PDA device closure
Figure 7: PLAX view showing decrease gradient across aortic
valve 1 month after PDA device closure
The Combination of Aortic stenosis with PDA is distinctly uncommon entity [2,4] and is cited very scarcely in literature
especially after neonatal period . In one of the study reported out
of 146 patient sent for PDA device closure only 3 patient had LVOT
obstruction 2 being subaortic membrane and 1 with biscuspid Aortic
valve [2] In aortic stenosis patients the gradient across Aortic valve is
dependent on aortic valve Area and amount of flow across the aortic
valve [5-7]. For treatment of severe aortic stenosis, an outstanding
balloon dilation procedure may leave the patient with only mild
aortic stenosis, but it may result in regurgitation. An outstanding
valve replacement operation will relieve essentially all outflow
obstruction, but leaves the child with an artificial valve, with need of anticoagulation. The long-term concern is that the child will outgrow
the size of the artificial valve and will require a repeat surgical valve
replacement in later years. And Ross procedure consisting of replacing
aortic valve with the pulmonary valve carries its own disadvantage
.All these aortic valvular intervention requires a good expertise
and also carries morbidity and mortality risks which adds to the
hemodynamic instability in patients with dual lesion .So by correcting
the lesion causing High Output state, patient gets stabilized and there
is possibility of reduction in severity of Aortic Stenosis which can be
medically managed as in our case after PDA device closure, gradient
across aortic valve decreased significantly. Thus the severity of aortic
obstruction may actually be overestimated in a large Left to right
shunt cases like PDA. Thus surgical management of Aortic valvular
disease can be done at a later stage if required on follow up.
Based on our experience in this case and through observation
of previous reported studies it is advised that before planning for
surgical/transcatheter guided management of LVOT obstruction
treatment of anomalies leading to High output states(like PDA) should
be done first.
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