Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where R. Roussin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by R. Roussin.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1995

Surgery for congenital mitral valve disease in the first year of life

Miguel Sousa Uva; Lorenzo Galletti; François Lacour Gayet; Dominique Piot; A. Serraf; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Juan V. Comas; R. Roussin; Anita Touchot; Jean Paul Binet; Claude Planché

Between 1980 and 1993, 20 patients less than 1 year of age underwent operations for congenital mitral valve disease. Ten patients had congenital mitral incompetence and 10 had congenital mitral stenosis. Mean age was 6.6 +/- 3.4 months and mean weight was 5.6 +/- 1.5 kg. Atrioventricular canal defects, univentricular heart, class III/IV hypoplastic left heart syndrome, discordant atrioventricular and ventriculoarterial connections, and acquired mitral valve disease were excluded. Indications for operation were intractable heart failure or severe pulmonary hypertension, or both. Associated lesions, present in 90% of the patients, had been corrected by a previous operation in seven. In congenital mitral incompetence there was normal leaflet motion (n = 3), leaflet prolapse (n = 2), and restricted leaflet motion (n = 5). In congenital mitral stenosis anatomic abnormalities were parachute mitral valve (n = 4), typical mitral stenosis (n = 3), hammock mitral valve (n = 2), and supramitral ring (n = 1). Mitral valve repair was initially performed in 19 patients and valve replacement in one with hammock valve. Concurrent repair of associated lesions was performed in 12 patients. The operative mortality rate was zero. There were six early reoperations in five patients for mitral valve replacement (n = 4), a second repair (n = 1), and prosthetic valve thrombectomy (n = 1). One late death occurred 9 months after valve replacement. Late reoperations for mitral valve replacement (n = 2), aortic valve replacement (n = 1), mitral valve repair (n = 2), subaortic stenosis resection (n = 1), and second mitral valve replacement (n = 1) were performed in five patients. Actuarial freedom from reoperation is 58.0% +/- 11.3% (70% confidence limits 46.9% to 68.9%) at 7 years. After a mean follow-up of 67.6 +/- 42.8 months, 94% of living patients are in New York Heart Association class I. Doppler echocardiographic studies among the 13 patients with a native mitral valve show mitral incompetence of greater than moderate degree in one patient and no significant residual mitral stenosis. Overall, six patients have mitral prosthetic valves with a mean transprosthetic gradient of 6.2 +/- 3.7 mm Hg. These results show that surgical treatment for congenital mitral valve disease in the first year of life can be performed with low mortality. Valve repair is a realistic goal in about 70% of patients and possibly more with increased experience. Reoperation rate is still high and is related to complexity of mitral lesions and associated anomalies, but late functional results are encouraging.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Repair of interrupted aortic arch: A ten-year experience

A. Serraf; François Lacour-Gayet; Monica Robotin; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Miguel Sousa-Uva; R. Roussin; Claude Planché

Eighty-two consecutive patients with interrupted aortic arch were referred to our institution between 1985 and 1995. Three died before any attempt at operation and 79 underwent surgical repair. Median age at operation was 9 days (range 1 day to 6 years) and median weight was 3.0 kg (range 1.8 to 20 kg). All but one were in severe congestive heart failure and 31.5% had oliguria or anuria. Preoperative pH varied between 6.8 and 7.4 (median 7.3). Sixty-nine received prostaglandin E1 infusion and 54 received mechanical ventilation. Aggressive preoperative ressucitation was necessary in 43 cases. Preoperative transfontanellar echography (performed routinely) since 1987 revealed intracerebral bleeding in six patients. Type A interrupted aortic arch was present in 37 cases, 41 patients had type B, and one had type C. Interrupted aortic arch was associated with single ventricular septal defect in 35 cases, 24 patients had associated complex heart defects, and 30 had significant subaortic stenosis (six had both subaortic stenosis and complex association). Aortopulmonary window was found in four patients, truncus arteriosus was found in eight, and transposition of the great arteries was found in five, double-outlet right ventricle was found in one, single ventricle was found in three, multiple ventricular septal defects were found in two and superior-inferior ventricles were found in one. Sixty-four patients underwent single-stage repair and 15 underwent multistage repair. Aortic arch repair consisted of direct anastomosis in 59 cases, patch augmentation in eight, and conduit interposition in 12. Ten patients underwent associated pulmonary artery banding and 19 underwent concomitant repair of complex associated lesions. The subaortic stenosis was addressed by four surgical techniques: myotomy or myectomy in five patients; creation of a double-outlet left ventricle, aortopulmonary anastomosis, and conduit insertion between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery bifurcation in four; no direct attempt to relieve the subaortic stenosis in six; and left-sided ventricular septal defect patch in 15. Mean duration of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, crossclamp time, and cardiopulmonary bypass time were 38.8 +/- 15.6 min, 60.5 +/- 24.7 min, and 143 +/- 40.1 min, respectively. Postoperative mortality rate was 18.9% (70% confidence limits 14% to 24.6%), and overall mortality rate was 31% (70% confidence limits 20.9% to 42.2%). The results have improved with time, with an overall operative mortality rate of 12% since 1990. Univariate statistical analysis revealed that early survival was influenced by preoperative renal function, detection of cerebral bleeding by transfontanellar echography, the number of cardioplegic injections, and the date of operation. Multivariate analysis revealed that preoperative renal function and the number of cardioplegic injections were independent risk factors for early mortality. Echocardiographic measurements of the left heart-aorta complex with preoperative Z values as low as-4 demonstrated rapid growth after repair. In the presence of subaortic stenosis, better survival was obtained with a left-sided patch for ventricular septal defect closure (p < 0.05). Twenty-three patients underwent 26 reoperations for recoarctations (seven), left bronchial compression (two), second-stage repair (eight), right ventricle-pulmonary artery conduit replacement (three), and miscellaneous (four). One of the survivors was reoperated on for subaortic membrane. Survival at 5 years for the entire series was 70%. For isolated forms, it was 73.5% (90% for 1990 to 1995), for complex forms it was 70%, and in the presence of subaortic stenosis it was 60%. In conclusion, interrupted aortic arch remains a surgical challenge with continually improving results. Early diagnosis with preoperative resuscitation and adequate myocardial protection seem extremely important for further improvements. Associated subaortic stenosis or complex lesions


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Unusual forms of tracheobronchial compression in infants with congenital heart disease

Monica Robotin; Jacqueline Bruniaux; A. Serraf; M.Sousa Uva; R. Roussin; François Lacour-Gayet; Claude Planché

Three groups of unusual forms of tracheobronchial compression caused by vascular anomalies are presented. Three patients had an encircling right aortic arch with a left-sided descending aorta and ligamentum arteriosum (group 1), two patients had airway compression caused by a pincer effect between a malposed and enlarged ascending aorta and the descending aorta (group 2), and three patients had airway compression after an arterial switch operation for transposition of the great arteries (group 3). Symptoms developed in all patients before the age of 4 months, and six of them had multiple failed attempts at extubation before the surgical intervention directed at relieving the airway compression. Fiberoptic endoscopy was used in all patients as a first-line diagnostic tool and was 100% accurate in establishing the diagnosis. The operations performed were aortic uncrossing in group 1, dissection and aortopexy of the right or left main bronchus in group 2, and dissection of the left main bronchus and lysis of adhesions in group 3. In group 1 there was one early death, resulting from aspiration, and one late death 4 years later, resulting from an unrelated cause. In this group, bronchomalacia was noted after the operation and resolved gradually in the year after the intervention. In group 2, one patient died of an aortobronchial fistula after placement of a bronchial stent. Group 3 patients had good postoperative results. Two of them are completely symptom-free and one has residual bronchomalacia and may need placement of a bronchial stent.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Surgery for tetralogy of Fallot at less than six months of age. Is palliation "old-fashioned"?

M. Sousa Uva; C. Chardigny; L. Galetti; F. Lacour Gayet; R. Roussin; A. Serraf; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Anita Touchot; Claude Planché; A. Cobanoglu; M. Haw; M. Wojtalik

Absence of consensus persists regarding the optimal procedure and timing for the surgical treatment of young infants with symptomatic tetralogy of Fallot. From 1987 through 1992, 56 patients with tetralogy of Fallot were operated on at less than 6 months of age. Forty-one patients (median age 2.9 months) underwent primary repair and 15 (median age 2.4 months) underwent initial palliation. Mean follow-up was 24.2 +/- 16.4 months. No strict protocol was used but patients who received initial palliation were younger, had a smaller pulmonary arterial tree, or had anomalous coronary artery. Two patients died (overall mortality 3.6%; 95% confidence limits 0% to 11%), one after initial palliation (6.7%), and one after primary repair (2.4%) (P = 0.47). Eight of the 15 patients who received initial palliation underwent repair and had an increase in pulmonary anulus size at the time of definitive repair (mean difference Z-value = 2.2 +/- 1.6 standard deviation; p = 0.006). Transannular patch was required in 50% of patients who underwent repair (56% among patients having primary repair versus 13% for patients having initial palliation; P = 0.03). Five patients underwent reoperation. Early primary repair of symptomatic tetralogy of Fallot was achieved with a low mortality rate and is the preferred protocol. Initial palliation remains indicated in case of associated cardiac anomaly, very low weight, or severely hypoplastic pulmonary artery tree.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1997

Surgical management of atrio ventricular septal defects with normal caryotype.

François Lacour-Gayet; Nicolas Bonnet; Dominique Piot; A. Serraf; Miguel Sousa-Uva; Emre Belli; R. Roussin; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Claude Planché

OBJECTIVEnAtrio ventricular septal defects (AVSD) with normal caryotype represent in average 25% of AVSD. They constitute a more complex group of patients characterized by frequent left sided heart obstructive lesions, raising the problem of the appropriate indications between biventricular and univentricular procedures.nnnMETHODSnSixty-nine consecutive patients, who had AVSD with normal caryotype underwent surgery. According to the anatomical complexity there were 22 intermediate AVSD, 36 complete AVSD and 11 complex AVSD. Associated lesions were present in 68% of the patients including left sided heart anomalies in 57%. According to the size of the left ventricle (LV) evaluated on the LV/RV end diastolic diameter ratio calculated at 2D echocardiogram: right ventricular (RV) dominance was found in 29%; with border line LV in 13 patients and truly hypoplastic LV in 7 patients. Biventricular repair was always favored in case of border line LV and precluded when the LV/RV ratio was less than 0.33.nnnRESULTSnThere were 57 biventricular repairs with 10 years actuarial survival of 70 +/- 8% and respectively, 100% in the complex AVSD, 86% in the intermediate AVSD and 51% in the complete AVSD (P = 0.006). The risk factors for biventricular repair were the association to a subaortic stenosis (P = 0.01) and the severity of the mitral valve lesions (P = 0.03) that led to 38% reoperation. There were 12 univentricular palliation with 10 years survival of 66 +/- 14%. The risk factor for univentricular palliation was the association to a severe pre-operative mitral regurgitation (P = 0.005).nnnCONCLUSIONSnBiventricular repair should be precluded in patients presenting with subaortic stenosis. Severe mitral valve anomalies lead to elevated mortality and morbidity with frequent reoperations. Univentricular repair might have larger indications and cardiac transplantation might be considered in patients with truly hypoplastic LV presenting with severe pre-operative AV valve regurgitation.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2015

Late outcomes after arterial switch operation for Taussig-Bing anomaly

Mathieu Vergnat; Alban-Elouen Baruteau; Lucile Houyel; Mohamedou Ly; R. Roussin; André Capderou; Virginie Lambert; E Belli

OBJECTIVEnTo assess the long-term results of the arterial switch operation (ASO) for Taussig-Bing Anomaly (TBA) and identify risk factors affecting outcomes.nnnMETHODSnRetrospective review and late follow-up was performed for all TBA patients from 1997 to 2010 (follow-up >3 years). Selection criteria included the absence of mitro-pulmonary continuity.nnnRESULTSnSixty-nine children underwent ASO at a median age of 24 days (interquartile range [IR] 11-125), with concomitant repair of aortic arch obstruction in 26 (37.7%). Complex coronary anatomy (n = 38; 55.0%) was common. Nine (13.0%) patients had staged repair. Hospital mortality was 5.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.6%-14.2%; n = 4). Median follow-up was 11.2 years (IR 7.2-13.8). Subsequent mortality was confined to the first postoperative year (n = 5, 86% [95% CI, 78%-95%]), 1-, and 10-year survival). Overall mortality was related to coronary pattern (Yacoub types C and E vs A and D, multivariate, hazard ratio [HR] 12.2 [95% CI, 1.2-122.1], P = .03). At latest follow-up, 96% of the survivors are asymptomatic, with normal ventricular function. Cumulative incidence of reintervention at 10 years was 53% (95% CI, 28%-77%). Concomitant aortic arch obstruction was a predictor of reintervention (multivariate, HR 2.9 [95% CI, 1.1-7.4], P = .03). No mortality occurred upon reinterventions.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIn the largest series to date of ASO for TBA, mortality is confined to the first postoperative year, and related to coronary artery pattern. Beyond the first year, needed reinterventions are frequent, but with sustained functional status and no mortality over >10 years follow-up. Aortic arch obstruction is the main predictor for reintervention. Despite a significant rate of early events, favorable long-term outcomes argue for use of the ASO in TBA patients.


Annales D'otolaryngologie Et De Chirurgie Cervico-faciale | 2006

Hypoplasies trachéales complexes du nourrisson : extension des limites de la « Slide Tracheoplasty »

E. Le Bret; Gilles Roger; S. Pezzettigotta; E Belli; R. Roussin; Alain Serraf; Eréa Noel Garabédian

Objectifs La tracheoplastie de glissement ou « slide tracheoplasty » est progressivement devenue la technique de choix pour le traitement des hypoplasies etendues de la trachee chez l’enfant et le nourrisson. Cependant, certaines situations rendent difficile cette technique et l’hypoplasie est alors le plus souvent corrigee par mise en place de materiel etranger. Materiel et methodes Cinq patients âges de 1 a 6 mois presentant des hypoplasies complexes de trachees ont ete operes entre 2001 et 2005 par notre equipe. L’hypoplasie etait dite complexe car associee a une stenose critique, une stenose du cricoide, une hypoplasie des bronches, une bronche tracheale ou encore une atresie de l’oesophage avec tracheomalacie severe. Tous ont ete traites par des variantes de « slide tracheoplasty ». Resultats En postoperatoire, la duree moyenne de ventilation a ete de 8 jours et la duree moyenne de reanimation de 15 jours avec une mortalite nulle. Le principal facteur de morbidite a ete une paralysie recurentielle unilaterale chez 2 patients. A long terme (suivi moyen de 27 mois), aucun enfant n’a du subir de reintervention, tous presentent une croissance et une activite normales. Conclusions La slide tracheoplasty represente une bonne alternative therapeutique en cas d’hypoplasie severe et complexe de la trachee chez le nourrisson.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Surgery for tetralogy of Fallot at less than six months of age

Miguel Sousa Uva; Catherine I. Chardigny; L. Galetti; François Lacour Gayet; R. Roussin; Alain Serraf; Jacqueline Bruniaux; Anita Touchot; Cl Planche


EMC - Techniques chirurgicales - Thorax | 2011

Anomalies des arcs aortiques

E. Le Bret; François Roubertie; Mathieu Coblence; Mohammed Ly; R. Roussin; E Belli


EMC - Techniques chirurgicales - Thorax | 2010

Coarctations aortiques et hypoplasies de l'arche

François Roubertie; E. Le Bret; E Belli; R. Roussin; Mohammed Ly; N. Bensari; A. Serraf

Collaboration


Dive into the R. Roussin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Serraf

University of Paris-Sud

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge