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Long-term behaviour of left ventricular function in ortothopic heart transplantation

Ortothopic heart transplantation (OHT) was performed in 110 patients at the Heart Institute, between march 1985 and february 1993 for treatment of terminal cardiomyopathy. From these patients, 24 had a survival period of more than 36 months and were selected for a long term analysis of the left ventricular function. They were observed in a 56 months average follow-up. The patients were 44.3 years old average, being 21 (87.5%) male. The ethiology of the cardiac diseases was dilated cardiomyopathy for 13 (54.2%) patients, ischemic for 8 (33.3%) patients and Chagas' Disease for 3 (12.5%) patients. All patients were initially in functional class IV (NYHA). They were evaluated by cinecoronariography, hemodynamic and echocardiographic studies preoperatively, and every year in a 5 years follow-up. The results suggest that: 1) all patients presented left ventricular hipertrophy as an adaptative mechanism; 2) the arterial hypertension was observed since the first year of follow-up; 3) the acute rejection episodes and the myocardiopathy ethiology did not interfere on the left ventricular function; 4) the acelerated atherosclerosis had a negative effect on left ventricular function; 5) the echocardiographic and hemodynamic evaluation showed a left ventricular function stability of 5 years after surgery; nevertheless, it was observed an important reduction of the cardiac index associated with a crescent increase of abnormal measures results, suggesting a late reduction of the left ventricular performance.

heart transplantation; heart transplantation


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