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Dive into the research topics where Jacques A.M. van Son is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacques A.M. van Son.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1994

Traumatic tricuspid valve insufficiency. Experience in thirteen patients.

Jacques A.M. van Son; Gordon K. Danielson; Hartzell V. Schaff; Fletcher A. Miller

From 1964 through June 1993, thirteen patients with traumatic tricuspid insufficiency were treated surgically; all were male, and the ages ranged from 17 to 64 years (median 39 years). The condition was associated with blunt chest trauma in all patients: motor vehicle accidents in twelve and an explosion of a tank of compressed air in one. The median duration between trauma and operation was 17 years (range 1 month to 37 years). Preoperatively, six patients were in sinus rhythm and seven were in atrial fibrillation. At operation, the right ventricular function appeared moderately to severely depressed in twelve patients. In twelve patients, the anterior leaflet was flail because of chordal rupture (n = 9), rupture of anterior papillary muscle (n = 3), or tear in the anterior leaflet (n = 1). In one patient, the septal leaflet was missing and in another it was retracted and adherent to the ventricular septum. In five patients the tricuspid valve was repaired and in eight it was replaced. In seven patients in the latter group, the chordae, papillary muscles, and/or tricuspid valve leaflet(s) were found to be in a contracted and atrophic state, precluding repair. No early or late deaths occurred. At follow-up extending to 26 years (median 12 years), 12 patients are in New York Heart Association class I and one patient is in class II. Nine patients were in sinus rhythm and four were in atrial fibrillation. Although our experience indicates that good functional results can still be achieved many years after the onset of traumatic tricuspid valve insufficiency, earlier diagnosis and surgical treatment should increase the feasibility of tricuspid valve insufficiency, earlier diagnosis and surgical treatment should increase the feasibility of tricuspid valve repair, prevent progressive deterioration of right ventricular function, and increase the possibility of maintaining late sinus rhythm in a greater number of patients.


Mayo Clinic proceedings | 1993

Surgical treatment of vascular rings: the Mayo Clinic experience.

Jacques A.M. van Son; Paul R. Julsrud; Donald J. Hagler; Eugene K.W. Sim; Peter C. Pairolero; Francisco J. Puga; Hartzell V. Schaff; Gordon K. Danielson

From 1947 through 1992, 37 Mayo Clinic patients underwent operation for the relief of tracheoesophageal obstruction that resulted from vascular rings and related entities. Of the 37 patients, 18 had a double aortic arch, 11 had a right aortic arch with an aberrant left subclavian artery, 4 had a left aortic arch with an aberrant right subclavian artery, 2 had a pulmonary artery sling, 1 had a right aortic arch with mirror-image branching and a left ligamentum arteriosum, and 1 had a left aortic arch, a right descending aorta, and a right ductus arteriosus. Symptoms consisted of stridor, recurrent respiratory infections, and dysphagia. The anomaly was approached through a left thoracotomy in 31 patients, through a right thoracotomy in 4, and through a median sternotomy in 2. Only one early postoperative death (3%) and no late deaths occurred. At long-term follow-up (maximal duration, 45 years), three patients had residual symptomatic tracheomalacia, one of whom required right middle and lower lobectomy for recurrent pneumonia. Magnetic resonance imaging is the imaging technique of choice for accurate delineation of the vascular and tracheal anatomy. When patients are symptomatic, vascular ring should be repaired. The surgical risk is minimal, and the long-term results are excellent.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1994

Imaging strategies for vascular rings

Jacques A.M. van Son; Paul R. Julsrud; Donald J. Hagler; Eugene K.W. Sim; Francisco J. Puga; Hartzell V. Schaff; Gordon K. Danielson

Thirty-nine patients have undergone operation for relief of tracheoesophageal compression resulting from vascular rings and related entities at the Mayo Clinic. Nineteen patients had a double aortic arch, 11 patients had a right aortic arch with an aberrant left subclavian artery, 5 patients had a left aortic arch with an aberrant right subclavian artery, 2 patients had a pulmonary artery sling, 1 patient had a right aortic arch with mirror-image branching and a left ligamentum arteriosum, and 1 patient had a left aortic arch, a right descending aorta, and a right ductus arteriosus. Diagnostic examinations included chest radiography, barium esophagography, angiography, and, more recently, transthoracic echocardiography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging. A comparison among the various diagnostic techniques used in 12 patients during the last 12 years showed that angiography (n = 7), magnetic resonance imaging (n = 5), and computed tomography (n = 3) were the most reliable, as they always accurately delineated the anatomy. However, in the 6 patients who underwent transthoracic echocardiography, 1 of whom was an older child and 2 of whom were adults, the vascular abnormality was described correctly only once; in the other 5 patients, the results were false-negative or the technique failed to visualize the relevant vascular structures sufficiently. Currently, magnetic resonance imaging is our imaging technique of choice for the delineation of the vascular and tracheal anatomy in patients suspected of having a vascular ring.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1993

Congenital Partial and Complete Absence of the Pericardium

Jacques A.M. van Son; Gordon K. Danielson; Hartzell V. Schaff; Charles J. Mullany; Paul R. Julsrud; Jerome F. Breen

Between 1952 and 1991, 15 Mayo patients were found to have partial or complete absence of the pericardium at the time of a cardiovascular surgical procedure. One patient with complete absence of the left pericardium had symptoms possibly related to the pericardial abnormality. This 42-year-old man had severe insufficiency of the tricuspid valve attributable to chordal rupture of the anterior leaflet, possibly precipitated by complete displacement of the heart into the left pleural space. Excision of the ruptured chordae and plication of the anterior flail leaflet rendered a competent tricuspid valve. In two patients, a small defect in the pericardium was repaired. Three patients who underwent operation for complex congenital heart disease died: two early postoperatively and one late after a reoperation. In the other 12 patients, no early or late postoperative complications were encountered. Although rare and usually asymptomatic, complete and partial deficiency of the pericardium may lead to serious complications such as cardiac valvular insufficiency or incarceration of cardiac tissue.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1993

Histological study of the internal mammary artery with emphasis on its suitability as a coronary artery bypass graft

Jacques A.M. van Son; Frank Smedts; Peter Wilde; Nico H.J. Pijls; Luthy Wong-Alcala; Karel Kubat; Giuseppe Tavilla; Leon K. Lacquet

The internal mammary, musculophrenic, and superior epigastric arteries were unilaterally harvested from 11 individuals (aged 49 to 83 years; mean age, 67 years) and were examined histologically at 1-cm intervals. In 2 individuals the media of the entire internal mammary artery was elastic, whereas in the other 9 individuals we observed an alternating histological pattern in the media of the internal mammary artery, that of the proximal and distal segments being elastomuscular and that of the mid segment being elastic. In 4 of the latter 9 individuals the distal 10% to 20% of the media of the internal mammary artery was muscular with rare elastic lamellae. The media of the first 1 to 2 cm of the musculophrenic and superior epigastric arteries was elastomuscular or muscular with rare elastic lamellae, whereas more distally the media was purely muscular. The degree of intimal hyperplasia was significantly greater in arterial segments with a purely muscular media (25.6%) than in those with elastic (16.7%), elastomuscular (15.3%), and muscular (with rare elastic lamellae) (17.5%) types of media (p < 0.01). The mean cross-sectional luminal area of the elastic segment (1.9 mm2) and proximal and distal elastomuscular segments (1.9 and 1.2 mm2, respectively) of the internal mammary artery was significantly greater than that of the muscular segments of the musculophrenic artery (0.9 mm2) and the superior epigastric artery (0.7 mm2) (p < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Repair of congenital and acquired pulmonary vein stenosis

Jacques A.M. van Son; Gordon K. Danielson; Francisco J. Puga; William D. Edwards; David J. Driscoll

BACKGROUND Congenital pulmonary vein stenosis is a rare cause of obstruction of pulmonary venous blood flow with a high mortality. Acquired pulmonary vein stenosis is an equally serious condition. METHODS Eight patients (age range, 3 months to 43 years; median age, 1.5 years) underwent surgical relief of pulmonary vein stenosis. Two had congenital pulmonary vein stenosis, 5 had pulmonary vein stenosis that was acquired after surgical treatment of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection, and 1 had pulmonary vein stenosis associated with idiopathic mediastinal fibrosis and calcification. RESULTS One infant died 2 months after correction of acquired pulmonary vein stenosis. At follow-up extending to 16 years (median follow-up, 6.5 years), 6 patients are in New York Heart Association functional class I, and 1 patient is in class II. CONCLUSIONS In view of the dismal natural history of untreated pulmonary vein stenosis, prompt surgical relief of the stenosis may be a rewarding undertaking.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1993

Cor Triatriatum: Diagnosis, Operative Approach, and Late Results

Jacques A.M. van Son; Gordon K. Danielson; Hartzell V. Schaff; Francisco J. Puga; James B. Seward; Donald J. Hagler; Douglas D. Mair

From May 1960 to January 1992, 13 patients with cor triatriatum underwent surgical correction at the Mayo Clinic. Their ages ranged from 7 months to 57 years. Four patients had isolated cor triatriatum; three others had an associated patent foramen ovale or atrial septal defect. Six patients had major associated cardiac anomalies. In patients who had isolated cor triatriatum or associated anomalies with high pulmonary blood flow, the mean gradient across the left atrial diaphragm was 24.4 mm Hg, in comparison with 11.6 mm Hg in patients who had cor triatriatum and a connection between the common pulmonary venous chamber and the right atrium or associated cardiac anomalies that restricted pulmonary blood flow. In all 11 patients who underwent angiography, echocardiography, or both at our institution, the correct diagnosis was established preoperatively. Currently, echocardiography is the procedure of choice for diagnosing cor triatriatum. The diaphragm was excised through a left atrial approach in seven patients and through a right atriotomy in six. All associated anomalies were corrected. One critically ill patient who underwent an emergency operation in 1963 died early postoperatively, and one patient with chromosomal abnormalities and multiple cardiac defects died 2 months after an uneventful postoperative course. At the time of follow-up of the 11 long-term survivors, 9 were in New York Heart Association functional class I, and 2 (both of whom had major associated cardiac anomalies) were in class II. Postoperative angiography or echocardiography (in nine patients) showed no residual interatrial shunt or recurrent left atrial diaphragm.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Regression of tricuspid regurgitation after two-stage arterial switch operation for failing systemic ventricle after atrial inversion operation.

Jacques A.M. van Son; V. Mohan Reddy; Norman H. Silverman

The cases of five patients with previous Senning (n = 4) or Mustard (n = 1) operations and failing systemic ventricles in whom banding of the pulmonary artery was performed as an interim step toward an arterial switch procedure are reported. The rise in the ratio of left to right mean systolic ventricular pressure, from 0.35 before operation to 0.90 during operation and 0.80 on the first postoperative day, caused a shift of the ventricular septum from a leftward to a midline or nearly midline position. This shift was associated with a reduction of tricuspid regurgitation. At a median interval of 5.1 months after pulmonary artery banding, the mean left ventricular posterior wall thickness had increased to 8.2 mm, versus 5 mm before operation, and the mean left ventricular myocardial mass index had increased to 90 gm/m2, versus 55.6 gm/m2 before operation. After the arterial switch operation, which was performed in four patients, the tricuspid regurgitation decreased to a trivial amount (n = 1) or disappeared completely (n = 3).


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1990

Inferior epigastric artery as a conduit in myocardial revascularization: The alternative free arterial graft

Josef G. Vincent; Jacques A.M. van Son; Stefan H. Skotnicki

When complete revascularization cannot be obtained with the internal mammary artery and greater and lesser saphenous veins, the inferior epigastric artery may be an excellent alternative conduit. We describe our experience with this conduit, review the anatomy of this artery, and present our harvesting technique.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Morphologic determinants favoring surgical aortic valvuloplasty versus pulmonary autograft aortic valve replacement in children

Jacques A.M. van Son; V. Mohan Reddy; Michael D. Black; Hiranya A. Rajasinghe; Gary S. Haas

UNLABELLED The pulmonary autograft is being used with increasing frequency to replace the diseased aortic valve in the pediatric population. Attempted surgical aortic valvuloplasty with an unacceptable result and return to cardiopulmonary bypass for aortic valve replacement with a pulmonary autograft results in prolonged bypass time and increased potential for morbidity. Therefore, the ability to predict an unsuccessful outcome for valvuloplasty would be of significant clinical benefit. This issue is addressed in the present study. METHODS Twenty-two patients (median age 5.7 years, range 3 weeks to 14 years) with bicuspid (n = 11), tricuspid (n = 9), or quadricuspid (n = 2) aortic valves underwent valvuloplasty for aortic stenosis (n = 9), aortic regurgitation (n = 7), or a combination (n = 6). Previous related procedures included balloon aortic valvuloplasty (n = 3) and open surgical valvotomy (n = 1). Median pressure gradient across the aortic valve was 80 mm Hg. Surgical valvuloplasty techniques included thinning of leaflets (n = 18), commissurotomy (n = 15), suspension of reconstructed leaflet to the aortic wall (n = 10), closure of leaflet fenestration (n = 5), shortening of free edge of prolapsed cusp (n = 4), repair of torn leaflets (n = 3), and augmentation of scarred leaflets with autologous pericardium (n = 3). Concomitant subvalvular and supravalvular stenosis were repaired in nine and four patients, respectively. In five patients, during the same hospital stay, a failed valvuloplasty was converted into a valve replacement with a pulmonary autograft because of residual or resultant stenosis (n = 3) or regurgitation (n = 2). RESULTS No early or late deaths occurred. At a median follow-up of 16.3 months the median pressure gradient across the aortic valve in the 15 patients with preoperative stenosis or combined stenosis and regurgitation was 16 mm Hg (p < 0.01 versus preoperative gradient). Of the 22 patients, the aortic valve functioned normally (defined as < or = mild stenosis or regurgitation, or both) in 14 patients (including five patients with valve replacement); four patients had stenosis (gradients 40, 45, 60, and 60 mm Hg), two patients had regurgitation, and two patients had combined stenosis (gradients 40 and 50 mm Hg) and regurgitation. Three of the patients with recurrent stenosis underwent secondary surgical valvuloplasty without improvement. Outcome after valvuloplasty was examined according to valve structure: six of nine tricuspid valves functioned normally, whereas only three of 13 nontricuspid valves functioned normally (P = 0.07). Patients with a nontricuspid aortic valve and regurgitation had a high probability of requiring immediate valve replacement (P = 0.009). The actuarial freedom from significant native valve stenosis or regurgitation at 24 months was 82% for tricuspid valves and 36% for nontricuspid valves (P = 0.007). CONCLUSIONS (1) Surgical aortic valvuloplasty should be the preferred approach when the aortic valve is tricuspid. (2) In contrast, aortic valve replacement with a pulmonary autograft should be the preferred strategy in the presence of a nontricuspid aortic valve (especially when the aortic valve is regurgitant) and after failed surgical valvuloplasty.

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Josef G. Vincent

Radboud University Nijmegen

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