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Dive into the research topics where Zdenek Slavik is active.

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Featured researches published by Zdenek Slavik.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1997

Aortic Valve Repair of Congenital Stenosis With Bovine Pericardium

Frcs Michael J Tolan; Piers E Daubeney, Mb, Bs; Zdenek Slavik; Frcp Barry R Keeton; Frcp Anthony P Salmon; Frcs James L Monro

BACKGROUND Conservative surgical options in the treatment of congenital aortic stenosis are limited. To relieve the obstruction necessitates full incision of the raphe of the larger valve leaflet, but this inevitably causes prolapse. METHODS We performed aortic valve repair in 6 children, aged 14 months to 17 years, with congenital aortic stenosis, 2 having had aortic valvotomy as infants. The repair consisted of suturing the base of a triangular piece of bovine pericardium, with a simple vertical fold, to the free edges of the incised raphe. The pericardial fold was then sutured vertically to the aortic wall. RESULTS At follow-up of 2 to 60 months, the mean peak systolic Doppler gradients had decreased from 80 +/- 15 mm Hg to 26 +/- 9 mm Hg. The effective valvular orifice area increased from 33% +/- 6% to 64% +/- 3%, allowing blood flow to increase by a factor of 3.76. Two patients have mild and 2 have mild-to-moderate aortic regurgitation. CONCLUSIONS The described conservative repair renders the valve tricuspid and trisinusoidal, and the deficient interleaflet triangle is recreated, preventing cusp prolapse. Longer follow-up is required to assess the durability of unstented pericardium in the aortic position, but the early results are encouraging.


Heart | 1996

Bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis: how young is too young?

Zdenek Slavik; R. K. Lamb; Steven A. Webber; A. M. Devlin; Barry R. Keeton; James L. Monro; Anthony P. Salmon

OBJECTIVE--To define the lowest age at which the bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis can safely be used in infants with complex congenital heart defects. DESIGN--A retrospective analysis of clinical, echocardiographic, haemodynamic, and angiographic data in four consecutive patients undergoing bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis below the age of 2 months. PATIENTS--Between November 1990 and September 1993, four infants less than 8 weeks of age (3, 4, 6, and 7 weeks) underwent bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis as a primary palliation for complex heart disease. The indication for early surgical intervention was progression of cyanosis (n = 3) and high pulmonary blood flow causing heart failure (n = 1). In two infants with tricuspid atresia, surgery was performed through a right thoracotomy without the use of cardiopulmonary bypass. In one infant with double inlet left ventricle and discordant ventriculoarterial connection, cavopulmonary anastomosis was combined with an arterial switch procedure. The final infant had double inlet left ventricle with pulmonary atresia; the central pulmonary arteries were virtually discontinuous and each branch was supplied by a separate arterial duct. The central pulmonary arteries were reconstructed using the subaortic innominate vein. Temporary prostacyclin infusion was used in three patients in the immediate postoperative period. RESULTS--Early postoperative extubation (5, 7, and 48 h) was successful in three patients. The youngest child required ligation of the ductus arteriosus four days later because of severe upper body oedema. The postoperative course was complicated by prolonged effusions in two patients. All were alive and well 14-48 months postoperatively, with satisfactory systemic saturations (80-87%) and haemodynamic indices. CONCLUSIONS--This limited experience challenges the widely held belief that the bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis cannot be used as a primary palliation for complex heart disease in early infancy. A wider experience is required to determine the safety and indications for this approach.


Pediatric Cardiology | 1994

Persistent truncus arteriosus operated during infancy: Long-term follow-up

Zdenek Slavik; Barry R. Keeton; Anthony P. Salmon; Sutherland Gr; Lance V. Fong; James L. Monro

SummaryBetween July 1974 and October 1988 19 consecutive infants (mean age 2.7 months, range 5 days to 11.7 months) underwent surgical correction for persistent truncus arteriosus by one surgeon (J.L.M.). Continuity between the right ventricle and pulmonary arteries was achieved with an antibiotic-sterilized aortic homograft (diameter 13–18 mm) together with patch closure of the ventricular septal defect. There were 3 early postoperative deaths (16%): 1 patient had severe aortic regurgitation, the other 2 had preoperative cardiac arrests. Of the latter, 1 had suffered severe cerebral damage, and the other developed recurrent pulmonary hypertensive crises and low cardiac output. The 16 survivors have been followed for 3.1–17.3 years (mean 7.8 years). Four patients required subsequent replacement of the homograft for stenosis, aortic valve replacement for regurgitation, or both (3.0, 4.0, 8.5, and 12.0 years postoperatively). Of the 16 survivors, 15 are in NYHA class I. Of the 13 patients who have not had aortic valve surgery, 9 have no evidence of stenosis or regurgitation. In the 14 children with the original homograft the median of the residual peak gradient across the right ventricular outflow tract is 15 mmHg (range 10–40 mmHg), and no patient has severe homograft regurgitation at follow-up. Repair of persistent truncus arteriosus has been achieved with low early mortality and no late mortality, which reflects excellent long-term function of the homograft. Furthermore, if truncal valve function is good at presentation, patients are unlikely to require aortic valve surgery.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

A rare cause of profound cyanosis after Kawashima modification of bidirectional cavopulmonary anastomosis

Zdenek Slavik; Robert K. Lamb; Steven A. Webber; David J. Delaney; Anthony P. Salmon

The expected level of systemic arterial saturation may not be present after bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis in children with complex congenital cardiac anomalies. We present a case of persistent severe cyanosis in a patient with azygos continuation of the inferior vena cava after bidirectional superior cavopulmonary anastomosis (Kawashima procedure) due to an intrahepatic venovenous malformation. Subsequent transcatheter deployment of two Rashkind double umbrella devices into the malformation reduced the shunt and markedly improved systemic arterial saturation.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2018

Accuracy of computed tomography in detection of great vessel stenosis or hypoplasia before superior bidirectional cavopulmonary connection: Comparison with cardiac catheterization and surgical findings

Sylvia Krupickova; Laura Vazquez-Garcia; Monther Obeidat; Winston Banya; Giovanni DiSalvo; Olivier Ghez; Guido Michielon; Isabel Castellano; Michael B. Rubens; Thomas Semple; Edward D. Nicol; Zdenek Slavik; Michael Rigby; Alain Fraisse

BACKGROUND Cardiac catheterization is the gold-standard modality for investigation of cardiovascular morphology before bidirectional cavopulmonary connection, but requires general anaesthesia and is associated with procedural risk. AIMS To assess the diagnostic accuracy and safety of computed tomography in diagnosing great vessel stenosis/hypoplasia compared with cardiac catheterization and surgical findings. METHODS Twenty-seven patients (10 after Norwood stage I) underwent computed tomography before surgery between January 2010 and June 2016; 16 of these patients also underwent cardiac catheterization. Proximal and distal pulmonary artery, aortic isthmus and descending aorta measurements, radiation dose and complications were compared via Bland-Altman analyses and correlation coefficients. RESULTS The accuracy of computed tomography in detecting stenosis/hypoplasia of either pulmonary artery was 96.1% compared with surgical findings. For absolute vessel measurements and Z-scores, there was high correlation between computed tomography and angiography at catheterization (r=0.98 for both) and a low mean bias (0.71mm and 0.48; respectively). The magnitude of intertechnique differences observed for individual patients was low (95% of the values ranged between -0.9 and 2.3mm and between -0.7 and 1.7, respectively). Four patients (25%) experienced minor complications from cardiac catheterization, whereas there were no complications from computed tomography. Patients tended to receive a higher radiation dose with cardiac catheterization than with computed tomography, even after exclusion of interventional catheterization procedures (median 2.5 mSv [interquartile range 1.3 to 3.4 mSv] versus median 1.3 mSv [interquartile range 0.9 to 2.6 mSv], respectively; P=0.13). All computed tomography scans were performed without sedation. CONCLUSIONS Computed tomography may replace cardiac catheterization in identification of great vessel stenosis/hypoplasia before bidirectional cavopulmonary connection when no intervention before surgery is required. Computed tomography carries lower morbidity, can be performed without sedation and may be associated with less radiation.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2015

Arterial Switch Operation in Single Coronary Ostium With Intramural Course: Subclavian Artery Patch Angioplasty

Fabio Cuttone; François Lacour-Gayet; Imran Saeed; Ulrich Rosendahl; Jonathan Nervis; Zdenek Slavik; Olivier Ghez

This report describes a neonatal arterial switch operation in a transposition of the great arteries with single ostium and intramural course coronary pattern. The technique proposed is based on the creation of two coronary neoostia by incising the left coronary intramural course and splitting the common button followed by a patch enlargement of left coronary button using the left subclavian artery.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Pulmonary Atresia With Intact Ventricular Septum

Piers E.F. Daubeney; David J. Delany; Robert H. Anderson; George G.S. Sandor; Zdenek Slavik; Barry R. Keeton; Steven A. Webber


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2005

Pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum: predictors of early and medium-term outcome in a population-based study.

Piers E.F. Daubeney; D. Wang; David J. Delany; Barry R. Keeton; Robert H. Anderson; Zdenek Slavik; Marcus Flather; S.A. Webber


Circulation | 1995

Influence of Competitive Pulmonary Blood Flow on the Bidirectional Superior Cavopulmonary Shunt A Multi-Institutional Study

Steven A. Webber; Pavel Horvath; Jacques G. LeBlanc; Zdenek Slavik; Robert K. Lamb; James L. Monro; Oleg Reich; Jaroslav Hruda; George G.S. Sandor; Barry R. Keeton; Anthony P. Salmon


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Downsizing of valve allografts for use as right heart conduits

James L. Monro; Michael J. Tolan; Zdenek Slavik; Anthony P. Salmon; Barry R. Keeton

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Barry R. Keeton

Southampton General Hospital

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Anthony P. Salmon

Southampton General Hospital

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James L. Monro

Southampton General Hospital

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Steven A. Webber

Southampton General Hospital

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Piers E.F. Daubeney

National Institutes of Health

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David J. Delany

Southampton General Hospital

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Robert K. Lamb

Southampton General Hospital

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Olivier Ghez

Boston Children's Hospital

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Alain Fraisse

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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