Advertisement
Case Report| Volume 25, ISSUE 5, P304-307, May 2022

Late occurrence of ventricular septal rupture after deep septal myectomy for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: Causes and management

Published:December 30, 2021DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jccase.2021.11.013

      Abstract

      Surgical septal myectomy is increasingly utilized for patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy who remain symptomatic despite maximum doses of medical therapy. Deep and extensive septal muscle resections may lead to iatrogenic ventricular septal defects that are detected on transesophageal echocardiography immediately after weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass and immediately corrected in the same surgery. However markedly thinned out ventricular septum after myectomy may be prone to late rupture from high left ventricular systolic pressures causing delayed detection of a ventricular septal defect when the patients present with new onset symptoms. Additionally, a surgical injury to the first septal perforator artery during the myocardial resection leading to septal infarction may contribute to delayed occurrence of ventricular septal defect. Such a predisposing deep septal resection or septal infarction may be associated with varying degrees of atrioventricular nodal block warranting a permanent pacing. A new onset interventricular shunt from such an iatrogenic ventricular septal defect often leads to heart failure as the filling pressures increase disproportionately in the thick hypertrophied left ventricle. Transcatheter closure is an alternative to a high-risk repeat surgery. This report of device closure of two delayed septal ruptures after myectomy discusses the reasons, presentation, catheter approaches, and procedural challenges.
      <Learning objective: Deep extended septal myectomy for medically refractory hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy may lead to early or late iatrogenic ventricular septal defect. Such an extensive loss of septal muscle may be additionally indicated by co-occurrence of atrioventricular nodal block that needs permanent pacing. Heart failure from the new onset interventricular shunt is not clinically tolerated by the hypertrophied left ventricle due to elevated end diastolic pressures. Transcatheter closure of the ventricular septal defect is an attractive alternative to a morbid repeat surgery.>

      Keywords

      To read this article in full you will need to make a payment

      Purchase one-time access:

      Academic & Personal: 24 hour online accessCorporate R&D Professionals: 24 hour online access
      One-time access price info
      • For academic or personal research use, select 'Academic and Personal'
      • For corporate R&D use, select 'Corporate R&D Professionals'

      Subscribe:

      Subscribe to Journal of Cardiology Cases
      Already a print subscriber? Claim online access
      Already an online subscriber? Sign in
      Institutional Access: Sign in to ScienceDirect

      References

        • Schonbeck MH
        • Brunner-La Rocca HP
        • Vogt PR
        • Lachat ML
        • Jenni R
        • Hess OM
        • Turina MI
        Long-term follow-up in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy after septal myectomy.
        Ann Thorac Surg. 1998; 65: 1207-1214
        • Barioli A
        • Cardaioli F
        • Pavei A
        • Tarantini G
        Transcatheter closure of complex iatrogenic ventricular septal defect: a case report.
        Eur Heart J Case Rep. 2020; 4: 1-5
        • Kilicgedik A
        • Karabay CY
        • Aung SM
        • Guler A
        • Kalayci A
        • Tasar O
        • Kirma C
        A successful percutaneous closure of ventricular septal defect following septal myectomy in patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy.
        Perfusion. 2012; 27: 253-255
        • Ryu IH
        • Kim WH
        • Ryu AJ
        • Kim MG
        • Jeon JW
        • Kim JS
        • Lee JJ
        • Choi JH.
        Percutaneous closure of an iatrogenic ventricular septal defect following concomitant septal myectomy at the time of aortic valve replacement.
        Korean Circ J. 2014; 44: 45-48
        • Chessa M
        • Carminati M
        • Cao QL
        • Butera G
        • Giusti S
        • Bini RM
        • congenital Hijazi ZM.Transcatheter closure of
        • device acquired muscular ventricular septal defects using the Amplatzer
        J Invasive Cardiol. 2002; 14: 322-327
        • Parsons C
        • Zhao CB
        • Huang J
        Closure of an iatrogenic ventricular septal defect using a hybrid approach and echocardiographic guidance.
        Ann Card Anaesth. 2020; 23: 212-215
      1. Singh V, Badheka AO, Bokhari SS, Ghersin E, Clark PM, O'Neill WW. Retrograde percutaneous closure of a ventricular septal defect after myectomy for hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. Tex Heart Inst J 2013;40:468-71.

        • Aroney CN
        • Goh TH
        • Hourigan LA
        • Dyer W.
        Ventricular septal rupture following nonsurgical septal reduction for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: treatment with percutaneous closure.
        Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2004; 61: 411-414
        • Martinez MW
        • Mookadam F
        • Sun Y
        • Hagler DJ.
        Transcatheter closure of ischemic and post-traumatic ventricular septal ruptures.
        Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2007; 69: 403-407
        • Tokoyama H
        • Yu SN
        • Sorabella R
        • Leb J
        • Pulerwitz TC
        • Cooper C
        • Argenio M
        • Shimada YJ
        • Weiner S
        • Ginns JN.
        Virtual septal myectomy for preoperative planning in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
        J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2019; 158: 455-463