The main problem in mitral valve repair surgery in children is the high number of postoperative residual lesions (49% of the total cases). Residual lesions after mitral valve repair are associated with morbidity and complications in the form of hemolysis and could affect the postoperative reverse remodeling process. Surgery techniques for mitral valve repair in children have fewer choices than adult patients because of the smaller and thinner valve structure. Besides, the weakness of the mitral valve repair technique that often occurs in large left ventricles with severe mitral regurgitation, after repairing with ring annuloplasty, there is usually a mild residual regurgitation due to posterior mitral leaflet that tends to become restrictive due to being attracted by the left ventricular wall that remains big. No technique has been found to overcome the problem of mitral regurgitation residuals that occur postoperatively. Therefore, by analyzing postoperative mitral valve structural abnormalities with conventional techniques, an additional posterior mitral valve elevation technique was designed to increase the area of coaptation between two leaves of the mitral valve so that the incidence of postoperative regurgitation lesions can be reduced.
The main problem in mitral valve repair surgery in children is the high number of postoperative residual lesions (49% of the total cases). Residual lesions after mitral valve repair are associated with morbidity and complications in the form of hemolysis and could affect the postoperative reverse remodeling process. Surgery techniques for mitral valve repair in children have fewer choices than adult patients because of the smaller and thinner valve structure. Besides, the weakness of the mitral valve repair technique that often occurs in large left ventricles with severe mitral regurgitation, after repairing with ring annuloplasty, there is usually a mild residual regurgitation due to posterior mitral leaflet that tends to become restrictive due to being attracted by the left ventricular wall that remains big. No technique has been found to overcome the problem of mitral regurgitation residuals that occur postoperatively. Therefore, by analyzing postoperative mitral valve structural abnormalities with conventional techniques, an additional posterior mitral valve elevation technique was designed. The posterior annulus elevation technique is a technique that is carried by lifting the posterior mitral annulus towards the cranial so that the posterior mitral leaflet can meet perfectly with the anterior mitral leaflet indicated by a larger coaptation area. This technique can be applied after repair with conventional techniques done optimally to reduce the possibility of postoperative residual lesions. The hypothesis in this study is that pediatric patients with mitral regurgitation who undergo mitral valve repair surgery with posterior annulus elevation techniques can reduce residual mitral regurgitation, improve clinical and metabolic outcomes of postoperative heart failure, and reduce the risk of postoperative hemolysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
58
Posterior mitral annulus elevation technique is performed using a large pledget and non-absorbable braided suture starting from the subvalvular section of the posterior mitral valve sutured to the ring annuloplasty (if in the process of repairing the mitral valve, ring implantation is performed; if without the use of ring annuloplasty, the suture is placed in the left atrial wall / supravalvular of PML), so that the posterior annulus is slightly attracted upward toward the cranial and the PML moves toward the center.
Conventional mitral valve repair in the pediatric patient using annuloplasty, leaflet resection and plication, sliding-plasty of chordae technique
Residual mitral valve regurgitation
Residual mitral valve regurgitation is measured using transesophageal echocardiography and transthoracic echocardiography
Time frame: 5 days after surgery
Mitral valve coaptation area
Mitral valve coaptation area is measured using transesophageal echocardiography and transthoracic echocardiography
Time frame: Intraoperative
Change of Haptoglobin at 3 months after surgery
Serum haptoglobin level that indicated the presence of intravascular hemolysis is measured after the surgery
Time frame: Preoperative (baseline), 5 days, 2 weeks and 3 months after surgery
Change of Lactate dehydrogenase at 3 months after surgery
Lactate dehydrogenase level that indicated the presence of intravascular hemolysis is measured after the surgery
Time frame: Preoperative (baseline), 5 days, 2 weeks and 3 months after surgery
Change of NT-proBNP at 3 months after surgery
NTproBNP is a marker of acute heart failure and indicates the process of heart remodeling.
Time frame: Preoperative (baseline), 5 days, 2 weeks and 3 months after surgery
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