William H. Neches
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by William H. Neches.
Circulation | 1974
William H. Neches; Robert A. Mathews; Sang C. Park; Cora C. Lenox; James R. Zuberbuhler; Ralph D. Siewers; Henry T. Bahnson
Anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery has been surgically corrected by means of a technique that avoids direct suturing of the coronary artery itself. The anomalous left coronary artery is removed from the pulmonary artery with a cuff of pulmonary artery tissue about its orifice. In a five-and-one-half-year-old patient the anomalous coronary artery was anastomosed directly to the aorta using this technique. In another patient, seven months of age, the anomalous coronary artery could not be anastomosed directly to the aorta and a segment of the patients subclavian artery was interposed between the left coronary artery and the aorta to complete the anastomosis. In the latter patient, profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest were used during construction of the anastomosis in an attempt to minimize further myocardial damage. The establishment of a two coronary artery system has been demonstrated to be feasible in the infant or young child with this anomaly.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999
Stephen G Pophal; Gunnlaugur Sigfusson; Karen L Booth; Silviu-Alin Bacanu; Steven A. Webber; Jose A. Ettedgui; William H. Neches; Sang C. Park
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the incidence of, and risk factors for, complications of endomyocardial biopsy in children. BACKGROUND Endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) is a low risk procedure in adults, but there is a paucity of data with regard to performing this procedure in children. METHODS Retrospective review of the morbidity and mortality of 1,000 consecutive EMB procedures. RESULTS One thousand EMB procedures (right ventricle 986, left ventricle 14) were performed on 194 patients from July 1987 through March 1996. Indications for EMB included heart transplant rejection surveillance (846) and the evaluation of cardiomyopathy or arrhythmia for possible myocarditis (154). Thirty-seven (4%) procedures were performed on patients receiving intravenous inotropic support. There was one biopsy related death, secondary to cardiac perforation, in a two-week-old infant with dilated cardiomyopathy. There were nine perforations of the right ventricle, eight occurring in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and one in a transplant recipient. The transplant patient did not require immediate intervention; two patients required pericardiocentesis alone, and six underwent pericardiocentesis and surgical intervention. All nine perforations were from the femoral venous approach (p < 0.01). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that the greatest risk of perforation occurred in children being evaluated for possible myocarditis (p = 0.01) and in those requiring inotropic support (p < 0.01). Other complications included arrhythmia (5) and single cases of coronary-cardiac fistula, flail tricuspid leaflet, pneumothorax, hemothorax, endocardial stripping and seizure. CONCLUSIONS Risk of endomyocardial biopsy is highest in sick children with suspected myocarditis on inotropic support. However, EMB can be performed safely with very low morbidity in pediatric heart transplant recipients.
Circulation | 1982
Sang C. Park; William H. Neches; Charles E. Mullins; D A Girod; P M Olley; G Falkowski; V A Garibjan; Robert A. Mathews; F J Fricker; Lee B. Beerman; Cora C. Lenox; James R. Zuberbuhler
During the past 4 years, five institutions have collaborated in evaluating the efficacy of blade atrial septostomy. The procedure was performed in 52 patients, including 31 with transposition of the great arteries, 10 with mitral atresia, five with tricuspid atresia and six with miscellaneous anomalies. The patients ages ranged from 1 day to 12 years (mean 13 months). Improvement occurred in 41 of 52 patients (79%). Four patients had an intact interatrial septum, and blade atrial septostomy was successfully performed by a transseptal technique. One patient died from a lacerated left atrial wall; other complications occurred in four patients. Blade atrial septostomy is an effective palliative procedure, even when the interatrial septum is thickened or intact.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1980
Cora C. Lenox; James R. Zuberbuhler; Sang C. Park; William H. Neches; Robert A. Mathews; F. Jay Fricker; Henry T. Bahnson; Ralph D. Siewers
Seven cases of absent right superior vena cava with persistent left superior vena cava and normal situs were diagnosed at Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh. All patients had associated cardiac defects. In two cases the diagnosis was made at autopsy, the first in 1957 and in a 26 day old infant with multiple cogenital defects and the second in 1965 in a 22 day old infant who had pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect and patent ductus arteriosus. Since 1966 absent right superior vena cava has been diagnosed at cardiac catheterization in five children. Three of these children have had surgery, two for subaortic stenosis and one for an atrial septal defect. One has an insignificant atrial septal defect and the fifth has a ventricular septal defect. The electrocardiogram of four reveals s short P-R interval and a leftward frontal plane axis of the P wave, suggesting a low atrial focus. None has had any significant conduction problem. All five children are living and well, the oldest has survived 13 years postoperatively. Certain precautions are necessary should corrective cardiac surgery or transvenous pacemaker insertion be necessary.
Circulation | 1978
Sang C. Park; William H. Neches; James R. Zuberbuhler; Cora C. Lenox; Robert A. Mathews; F J Fricker; R A Zoltun
SUMMARY A cardiac catheter enclosing an extensible blade was used to enlarge the interatrial opening in seven patients. Two patients with transposition of the great arteries who had balloon atrial septostomy as newborns subsequently presented with clinical evidence of a restrictive interatrial opening at I and 4 months of age. Cardiac catheterization confirmed restenosis of the interatrial opening and inadequate intracardiac mixing. After blade atrial septostomy the systemic arterial oxygen saturation increased by 20% and 30%, respectively. Five patients with mitral atresia complex, ages 2 months-91/2 years, had a restrictive interatrial communication and severe pulmonary venous hypertension (mean left atrial pressures ranged from 20-38 mm Hg). Following blade atrial septostomy, the pressure gradient between the atria was almost completely abolished and prompt clinical improvement was observed in each patient. All patients tolerated the procedure without complications.Blade atrial septostomy was a safe, effective procedure for enlarging the interatrial communication in this limited series of patients with an interatrial septum too thick to permit adequate rupture by conventional balloon atrial septostomy.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1984
Donald R. Fischer; William H. Neches; Lee B. Beerman; Frederick J. Fricker; Ralph D. Siewers; Cora C. Lenox; Sang C. Park
Seventeen patients with tetralogy of Fallot (TF) and absent pulmonic valve were seen at Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh from 1958 to 1981. In 7 patients, severe respiratory symptoms developed due to bronchial compression by an aneurysmal pulmonary artery, and 6 died. In 4 patients, moderate respiratory symptoms developed. Six patients remained free of respiratory distress. Medical and surgical management of patients with respiratory distress in infancy has been frustrating and frequently unsuccessful. A 4-month-old infant with respiratory distress underwent complete intracardiac repair with valve insertion and has subsequently survived with relief of symptoms. Considering the high mortality rate in this group of patients, further attempts at aggressive surgical repair in infancy for patients with severe respiratory symptoms is warranted. An anatomic review of pathologic specimens with this anomaly confirmed previous reports of the frequent association of absence of the ductus arteriosus in patients with tetralogy of Fallot and absent pulmonary valve. The exception is noted in patients with discontinuity between the right and left pulmonary arteries in which a ductus arteriosus may be present supplying the isolated left pulmonary artery.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1983
Judith H Murphy; Martha M Barlai-Kovach; Robert A. Mathews; Lee B. Beerman; Sang C. Park; William H. Neches; James R. Zuberbuhler
To evaluate ventricular function late after atrial repair of transposition of the great arteries (TGA), 26 asymptomatic patients had rest and exercise radionuclide ventriculography performed a mean of 9 years (range 5 to 15) after undergoing the Mustard operation. The mean resting right (systemic) ventricular (RV) ejection fraction (EF) was 0.50 +/- 0.10 (+/- 1 standard deviation); the RVEF was less than 0.45 in 8 patients. With exercise the RVEF increased in 9 patients and either failed to increase or decreased in 15 (including all 8 patients with resting values less than 0.45). The weight-adjusted work load performed was a first predictor of RV exercise response (sensitivity 87%, specificity 92%); patients whose RVEF increased did more work. The mean resting left (pulmonary) ventricular (LV) EF was 0.58 +/- 0.09; the LVEF was less than 0.50 in 3 patients. With exercise the LVEF increased in 14 patients and did not increase in 10 (including all 3 with resting values less than 0.50). The presence of complex ventricular arrhythmia documented on Holter monitoring was a first predictor of failure of the LVEF to increase with exercise (sensitivity 84%, specificity 71%). The patients age, operative age, postoperative interval, residual arterial desaturation, preoperative large ventricular septal defect or pulmonary stenosis, postoperative pulmonary stenosis or superior vena caval obstruction, or performance of a second open-heart procedure was predictive of the rest or exercise EF of either ventricle.
Circulation | 1995
Elfriede Pahl; Rajesh Sehgal; Dale Chrystof; William H. Neches; Catherine L. Webb; C. Elise Duffy; Stanford T. Shulman; Farooq A. Chaudhry
BACKGROUND The development of coronary aneurysms as sequelae of Kawasaki disease can result in myocardial ischemia, infarction, and sudden death. Traditionally, these patients have undergone coronary angiography and nuclear stress imaging for risk stratification and follow-up. However, angiography is invasive, and both modalities expose the patient to repeated radiation, which is an important issue in children. The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of performing exercise stress echocardiography in children diagnosed with coronary abnormalities secondary to Kawasaki disease. METHODS AND RESULTS Treadmill exercise stress echocardiographic studies were performed in 28 children ages 6 to 16 years. All had acute Kawasaki disease 1 to 10 years before study, and coronary artery abnormalities were identified during previous echocardiographic imaging. Patients were exercised using a standard Bruce protocol. Transthoracic echocardiographic images, obtained in the parasternal long, short, apical two- and four-chamber views immediately before and after exercise, were digitized for review and analysis. In baseline studies before exercise, wall motion abnormalities were identified in 2 patients; these segments became normal with exercise. Two patients developed new exercise-induced wall motion abnormalities that corresponded to angiographically defined critical stenosis of the left anterior descending coronary artery. No patients had resting or exercise-induced ECG evidence of ischemia. There were no adverse reactions, and 26 of 28 patients had normal exercise tolerance. CONCLUSIONS Among patients with coronary artery involvement resulting from Kawasaki disease, exercise stress echocardiography is a safe, noninvasive procedure and may identify children with myocardial ischemia that was not detected with ECG stress test alone.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1983
Sang C. Park; William H. Neches; Robert A. Mathews; Frederick J. Fricker; Lee B. Beerman; Donald R. Fischer; Cora C. Lenox; James R. Zuberbuhler
Pre- and postoperative cardiac catheterization data and cinenangiocardiograms of 82 patients who survived the Mustard operation for transposition of the great arteries (TGA) were reviewed. The post-operative catheterizations were performed 20 days to 10 years after operation (mean 2.5 years). Forty-six patients (56%) had no or insignificant associated cardiac lesions, whereas 36 (44%) had ventricular septal defect, pulmonary stenosis, or both, and required surgical intervention at the time of the Mustard operation. Postoperatively, 11 patients (13%) had significant systemic venous obstruction. Of the 11 patients, 6 required reoperation, and 2 patients had evidence of restenosis or complete obstruction in the superior vena cava after reoperation. In most patients, superior vena caval obstruction was well tolerated even in the presence of high pressure in the superior vena cava. Pulmonary venous obstruction occurred in 5 patients (6%), 3 of whom had no clinical symptoms despite severe pulmonary venous obstruction, although all had radiographic evidence of pulmonary venous congestion. The incidence of obstruction was drastically reduced after the Mustard operation was modified to include routine enlargement of the pulmonary venous atrium. Tricuspid regurgitation was uncommon (10%), but did occur in patients who had transatrial closure of a ventricular septal defect. Preoperatively, left ventricular outflow obstruction occurred in 38%. In 12 patients an attempt was made to relieve the obstruction at surgery. The 6 patients who had localized obstruction had a good result, but patients with more diffuse narrowing of left ventricular outflow had little or no relief of obstruction. Mild to moderate left ventricular outflow gradients regressed spontaneously in most patients after the Mustard operation.
Circulation | 1978
A A Monibi; William H. Neches; Cora C. Lenox; Sang C. Park; Robert A. Mathews; James R. Zuberbuhler
Seventeen patients with Ebsteins malformation of the tricuspid valve have been evaluated. The majority of patients (11/17) presented in the newborn period with cyanosis and cardiomegaly. The remainder (6/17) were referred because of cardiomegaly on chest X-ray and/or a heart murmur heard on routine examination. Three patients have died; one in the newborn period and two suddenly at the age of 11 and 15 years. Thirteen patients have un-dergone right and left heart cardiac catheterization within the last seven years. Twelve of these 13 patients (92%) had angiocardiographic left ventricular contraction abnormalities. Five patients also had mitral valve prolapse associated with left ventricular dysfunction. Since many patients with Ebsteins anomaly may have significant left ventricular abnormalities, careful and systematic evaluation of the left ventricle is warrante