The Natural and Unnatural History of Congenital Aortic Arch Abnormalities Evaluated in an Adult Survival Cohort

Publication date

2019-04

Authors

Lodeweges, Joyce E
Dikkers, Frederik G.
Mulder, Barbara J.M.
Roos-Hesselink, Jolien W.
Vliegen, Hubert W.
van Dijk, Arie P.J.
Sieswerda, Gertjan T JORCID 0000-0002-8296-6954
Konings, Thelma C.
Berger, R.ISNI 0000000398072928
Slebos, Dirk Jan

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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taverne

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study describes the different types of congenital vascular rings according to their anatomy, symptoms, and age at clinical onset and reports the surgical outcomes. METHODS: A retrospective observational database study was conducted, reviewing the medical charts of 69 adult survivors with a history of a vascular ring, identified from the Dutch Congenital Cor vitia database. RESULTS: Median age at presentation was 8.5 years (0-53.0 years). Thirty patients (43.5%) had a "left aortic arch with aberrant right subclavian artery," 21 patients (30.4%) a "double aortic arch," and 16 patients (23.2%) a "right aortic arch with aberrant left subclavian artery." The main symptomatology at presentation comprised respiratory symptoms (82.9%). Almost three-quarters of patients were also diagnosed with asthma/bronchial hyperreactivity. Patients with a double aortic arch had more symptoms than patients with a left aortic arch with aberrant right subclavian artery and right aortic arch with aberrant left subclavian artery (P < 0.001), requiring surgery most often (P < 0.001). In patients with childhood onset of symptoms, preoperative spirometry (ie, peak expiratory flows) was more often abnormal as compared with adult patients (P = 0.007). Surgery was performed in 42.0% of all patients at a median age of 17 years (0-63.0 years). Twenty-four (92.3%) of the operated patients showed improvement or complete relief of symptoms shortly after surgery. Of 26 asymptomatic nonoperated patients, 3 patients (11.5%) eventually developed symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: The low incidence of vascular rings, their anatomic heterogeneity, and a wide range of common symptoms often lead to misdiagnosis. Clinical awareness is warranted as a large subset of patients could benefit from surgery, even at an adult age.

Keywords

Taverne, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Citation

Lodeweges, J E, Dikkers, F G, Mulder, B J M, Roos-Hesselink, J W, Vliegen, H W, van Dijk, A P J, Sieswerda, G T, Konings, T C, Berger, R M F, Slebos, D J, Ebels, T & van Melle, J P 2019, 'The Natural and Unnatural History of Congenital Aortic Arch Abnormalities Evaluated in an Adult Survival Cohort', Canadian Journal of Cardiology, vol. 35, no. 4, pp. 438-445. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cjca.2018.12.004