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The
Ross Procedure
Robert
D.B. "Jake" Jaquiss, M.D.; Chief,
Pediatric and Congenital Cardiothoracic Surgery,
Arkansas Children's Hospital; Professor, Department
of Surgery, University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences College of Medicine
The Ross
procedure is among the most inventive and ingenious
cardiac surgical operations. It was described in 1967 by
Donald Ross in London as a solution for patients requiring
replacement of a malfunctioning or malformed aortic valve. The
operation, which is less commonly known as the autograph
procedure, involves the use of the patient’s own pulmonary
valve as a substitute for the aortic valve. The pulmonary
valve is then itself replaced by a human valve (known as
an allograft or a homograft) from a tissue bank. The underlying
principle of the operation is that the patient is left with
a normally functional, living valve in the aortic position.
This valve is capable of growth and self-repair to account
for the accumulated micro-trauma associated with millions
of cycles of valve opening and closing and does not require
the use of anti-coagulant medications to prevent clot formation
on the valve. The homograft valve in the pulmonary position
is non-living and is therefore susceptible to requiring replacement
because the accumulated wear-related damage. The pace of
such damage is remarkably slow for homograft valves in the
pulmonary position, however, presumably because the blood
pressure (and thus the valve-damaging force) on the right
side of the heart is relatively low.
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Before
Excision - Dotted lines indicate lines of
incision |
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Because of considerations of growth and its applicability
in sizes far smaller than commercially available artificial
heart valves, the Ross procedure has found great application
in pediatric cardiac patients. The operation is particularly
useful in patients in whom the area just beneath the diseased
aortic valve, known as the left ventricular outflow tract,
is pathologically small. In such circumstances, the left
ventricular outflow tract may be enlarged and the aortic
valve replaced in a combination operation known as the Ross-Konno
procedure. Another appealing aspect of the Ross procedure
is that potent anti-coagulant medications, as would be required
in patients with a mechanical heart valve, which are fraught
with hazard in growing and active children, can be completely
avoided after the Ross procedure. The procedure has
also been used in patients who may wish to become pregnant
(and therefore wish to avoid the increased risk of birth
defects in children whose mothers were taking certain anti-coagulant
medications during pregnancy). Ross procedures have also
been performed in active and athletic adult patients who
simply wish to avoid alteration in lifestyle associated with
anticoagulant medications.
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After
Excision - The coronary artery buttons are
shows as are the sites of implantation of
the autograft (left ventricle to aorta) and
the homograft (right ventricle to pulmonary
artery). |
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In addition to its many advantages, the Ross procedure also
has certain disadvantages that have tended to limit its universal
application across all patient groups. The first of these
is that it is a relatively technically challenging operation,
which not all cardiac
surgeons may be trained in or feel
comfortable performing. In large volume cardiac surgical
centers with appropriately experienced surgeons, the operative
risk for the procedure is very low and approximates that
of “simple” aortic valve replacement, but this
is not likely true in centers with less experience. Furthermore,
the concept that the valve in the pulmonary position is at
risk for requiring replacement raises the issue of creating
a potential problem where there was not one before. This
concept occasionally has been framed as “creating a
two-valve problem out of a one-valve problem.” Another
concern that has been raised about the Ross procedure is
that the autograft valve (formerly the pulmonary valve) seems
to enlarge disproportionately and even begin to leak in certain
patient populations. In rare instances, the autograft valve
has even failed and required replacement, negating any initial
advantage of the autograft over its competitors. Certain
types of aortic valve dysfunction – those associated
with rheumatic heart disease or Marfan
syndrome, for example – represent
conditions not typically felt suitable for the Ross procedure
because of the risk of recurrence of the original aortic
valve abnormality in the autograft.
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Post
Implant - The appearance after transfer of
the autograft, implantation of the homograft,
and re-implantation of hte coronary arteries
(the left coronary artery is implanted into
the back of the autograft - not seen). |
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After considering the various advantages and
disadvantages of the Ross procedure, certain technical
considerations must be borne in mind by the surgeon
in planning and performing the operation. The first
and most obvious of these is that the pulmonary valve
may not be suitable for transfer. This assessment of
suitability is made intra-operatively and consists
of surgical evaluation of the structure and size of
the pulmonary valve. Occasionally, the valve may be
congenitally malformed or may have been damaged in
a previous operation, rendering it unfit for use as
an autograft. Another
relatively unfavorable finding is massive disproportion
between the size of the proposed autograft and the
left ventricular outflow tract, although this is generally
manageable by various reconstructive and tailoring
maneuvers. There
are several techniques used for implanting the autograft
that differ chiefly in the question of whether any
of the native aortic wall above the valve is left in
place, as the autograft is sewn in. The merits of the
different approaches continue to be debated without
any clear consensus. The appearance of the base of
the heart as the autograft is excised and transferred
is shown in the figure, as is the location of the coronary
arteries which must be removed from the original aortic
root and reimplanted in the autograft in the most commonly
performed version of the operation. A novel modification
was recently proposed by Dr. Ross Ungerleider, which
involves placing the autograft within a cloth (Dacron)
cylinder as it is implanted. The cylinder then prevents
the autograft from expanding, which in turn should
prevent the valve from developing leakage as described
above, and the preliminary results with this approach
have been very encouraging.
Since its introduction in 1967, the Ross procedure
has found wide acceptance, particularly among congenital
heart surgeons. For young patients, active patients,
potentially pregnant patients, and patients who are not
yet finished growing, the procedure often provides the best
option if aortic valve replacement is required. The operative
risks have generally been very low, and have diminished
further as wider experience has been gained and certain
technical modifications applied. Furthermore, although the
concern about creating two-valve disease has certainly been
validated over time, the observed risk of reoperations to
replace the homograft in the pulmonary position has been
exceptionally low, and has been preferred by many young
adult patients to the sentence of lifelong exposure to anticoagulant
medications inherent in the alternative choice of mechanical
aortic valve replacement. If not yet quite routine, the
Ross procedure has certainly become a standard option for
aortic valve replacement for appropriate candidates, and
is invaluable especially in our youngest and smallest patients.

Looking
Back on a Holiday Season of Care, Love and Hope
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Hilary
Harber, LMSW, social worker, CVICU |
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Hilary Harber, LMSW, Social
Worker, CVICU
As winter sets in, patients at Arkansas
Children’s Hospital have just endured another
holiday season in our care. Every year, we see
several patients who are unable to leave the hospital
during this important time. Family members and
friends may wonder how these patients have coped
and how ACH has helped them.
When a child is hospitalized, parents often experience
feelings of frustration, sadness, anxiety or helplessness.
Parents and families worry about what will happen
to their child, even though they may not show it
in ways we expect. Many feel unprepared to
discuss their fears, feelings and questions with
their child, their other children or other family
members.
Having a child hospitalized in an intensive care
setting often challenges parents’ core beliefs
around the safety of their children. For parents
of newborns, this can also be a time of grief for
the experiences that they have anticipated for several
months. Parents’ relationships with the medical
team may take priority, while other important relationships
and activities may be disrupted.
These experiences are multiplied during the holidays
when families face the added strain of being away
from their loved ones as well as the daunting task
of creating a new tradition outside of what is familiar.
Additionally, families feel stressed by their personal
relationships, finances, expectations, time and
physical demands.
The social workers at Arkansas Children’s
Hospital recognize that the holidays can be especially
difficult and stressful for patients and families.
During the holiday season, ACH social workers continue
to advocate and provide support, while maintaining
a critical role in the communication between the
medical team, patients and their families.
Social workers help families handle the stress
of hospitalization during the holidays by providing
emotional support and acknowledging the hardships
they experience. Furthermore, social workers assist
with connecting families in need to community resources
whose donations help families have holiday celebrations.
Social workers also help inform patients and families
about the various holiday programs and support that
occurs through the hospital; these can range from
carolers or a holiday meal, to stockings at the
bedside on Christmas morning. Together, the social
workers at ACH work to extend care, love, and hope
to patients and their families during the holiday
season.

Two
Conditions Make Happy Infant a Challenging Patient
Jujuana Story didn’t know what to expect when
she learned the baby she was carrying would be born
with hypoplastic
left heart syndrome. For one thing,
she’d never heard of the condition before.
Her physician referred Jujuana to Arkansas
Children’s
Hospital (ACH) in Little Rock, where a team of physicians,
nurses, social workers and child life specialists explained
what was wrong with her soon-to-born baby boy and how
they could help.
“They made it so I could understand everything,” Story
said. “I wasn’t confused because they
told me to ask questions.”
She learned from the team that her baby’s heart
didn’t develop properly on the left side. In
a healthy heart, the right chamber pumps blood to the
lungs so it can receive oxygen, while the left pumps
the oxygenated blood to the rest of the body. Having
hypoplastic left heart syndrome meant the right side
of her baby’s heart would have to work extra
hard to pump blood to both the lungs and away from
them to his little body.
Jujuana delivered her baby at full term and named
him Dalton. Soon after the labor, a transport team
arrived at the hospital and carried Dalton via helicopter
to ACH. Jujuana and her husband, Roscoe, followed in
their car as soon as she was discharged.
“I was scared to even hold him the first time
after he was born,” Story said. “He was
so little and had so many monitors. But they had everything
set up smoothly. By the time he went into surgery,
we knew exactly what to expect.”
Before Dalton could even have his newborn screening
tests, he needed emergency surgery to help his heart
work better.
“Unfortunately, this is a complicated surgery
that means we had to stop his heart,” said Dalton’s
cardiologist, Brian Eble, MD. He also is an assistant
professor of Pediatrics in the Section of Pediatric
Cardiology at the University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences College of Medicine. “That meant he
had to have a lot of blood transfusions.”
Though his surgery was successful, Dalton’s
plight would soon become even more complicated. He
soon had another procedure to make his heart more efficient.
Then, his team learned something new about Dalton.
Because his newborn screenings used blood from the
transfusions he received from donors, they were inaccurate.
During further testing prior to his second surgery,
doctors found out he also had sickle cell anemia. This
condition worsens when the blood has less oxygen. Patients
with hypoplastic left heart syndrome tend to have lower
oxygen levels in their blood because of mixing of blue
and red blood inside the single pumping chamber.
“So Dalton has two completely separate and complicated
diseases,” Eble said. “Unfortunately,
they react to each other.”
The team at ACH began to pore over textbooks and call
physicians across the country for advice because they’d
never seen a case like Dalton’s. It turned out
nobody else had, either.
“We talked to a lot of people and came up with
a lot of opinions,” Eble said. “Then we
brought our team together with the Storys and came
up with a plan.”
That plan includes Dalton coming to ACH about once
a month to have a double volume exchange transfusion,
which pulls all of the blood with sickle cells out
of his body and replenishes it with healthy, fully
oxygenated donor blood. Dalton has this procedure performed
in the Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit because of
the team’s familiarity with children with heart
disease, with the assistance of staff from the Hematology
unit, which specializes in patients with blood disorders.
After his birth last May, Dalton stayed at ACH in
the Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit for a little
over two months. Now his family makes the four-hour
drive to Little Rock from their Ripley, Miss. home
at least once a month.
“We do this because we have always wanted to
give our little boy a chance to live,” Jujuana
Story said.
The hospital’s emphasis on involving the family
in medical treatment planning has been helpful for
the Storys. The entire medical team is dedicated to
ensuring parents understand what is happening to their
child and what can be expected.
“I would never pretend to understand what these
parents go through,” Eble said. “But I
can imagine what I think it would be like and how I
would want to be involved and find out about my child’s
care. We want to put ourselves in their shoes.”
Eble also said that parents often feel powerless when
their children are sick and hurting, and equipping
them with good information gives them an opportunity
to regain control.
“We want them to feel included and empowered,” he
said.
Today, Dalton is a happy infant who is starting to
blow bubbles and enjoys being spoiled by his older
brother, Jamal. Though he has more major surgeries
on the horizon, he feels good most of the time, his
mother said. He smiles and giggles. He’s even
begun to stand.
“The reason people know about his condition
is because we tell them,” Jujuana said. “He
acts like a happy baby. When we go to church, people
can’t understand how he can be going through
what he is because he seems healthy.”
Dalton’s experience has been positive in large
part because of his parents’ attentiveness and
involvement, Eble said.
“Dalton is a complicated kid to care for, and
they’ve been true champions for him every step
of the way,” Eble said. “Miraculously,
his mom has even been a champion for other mothers
who are going through similar surgeries with children
who only have one of Dalton’s diseases.”

Spotlight on
Shannon Spears, CVICU RN
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Shannon
Spears, CVICU RN |
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What is your role at ACH, and how long
have you worked here?
I have been an RN in the Cardiovascular
Intensive Care Unit for five and a half years and
worked as a patient care partner (PCP) in CV for
one year before that. I now am one of the weekday
shift coordinators and have been in this role for
two years this month.
Why is your job rewarding?
Although we see some really sick kids, it is really
rewarding to watch most of them “grow up.” Whether
it is one of the transplant patients who just
drops by to visit, or the hypoplastic left heart
syndrome kid who comes back for his or her next
stage of surgery, we get frequent reminders of
the good things we are doing here. Pediatric
cardiology has come so far in the last 10 to
20 years, and I think it is awesome that most
of these kids wouldn’t have had a chance
if it weren’t for the work and research
that we do here.
How did you become interested in pediatric cardiology or cardiovascular
surgery?
Most people don’t know this, but I was actually
seen at ACH as a child for a murmur that my pediatrician
had found. It turned out to be a bicuspid pulmonary
valve that never gave me any problems, and I was
eventually released from having to be seen every
year. Once I got into nursing school, I quickly
figured out that I liked intensive care more than
just Med/Surg, and preferred pediatrics over adult
care. So I applied to ACH Heart Center as a PCP
in nursing school, and here I am today.
What do you want people to know about
the Heart Center at Arkansas Children’s
Hospital?
I think there is a stigma that because we are in
Arkansas we are not that advanced. I wish more
people knew just how advanced we really are and
that we are one of the nation’s leading hospitals
in the care of pediatric cardiology.
What do you enjoy most about working with
children?
To be honest, they are smaller, easier to care
for and sometimes a lot less whiny than some sick
adults! But on a more serious note, I like to see
what we do for these kids and to be able to watch
most of them progress and grow up.
What has been your most memorable moment
working in the Heart Center at Arkansas Children’s
Hospital?
There are a lot of things that come to mind, but
I guess one that has led me to where I am today
was the day that Stephanie Rockett, APN, informed
me that she had told our director that she thought
I should learn to relief coordinate. I was honored,
but thought that she had lost her mind. I mean,
I had only been a nurse for about two and a half
years; what did I know about coordinating?! And
now, because of that conversation with Stephanie
about three years ago, I am where I am today. Although
I still have a lot to learn, I do enjoy being a
resource for our newer nurses and watching them
develop in their own nursing skills.
What is your greatest professional achievement?
Simply being able to be a part of the Heart Center
Team is a great achievement in my eyes. I know
that my position is very important in providing
adequate, safe care for our patients. Knowing
that I try my best in providing such care is
an achievement in itself.

Spotlight
on Lindsay Titsworth, RN, Pediatric Cardiovascular
Surgical Nurse
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Lindsay
Titsworth, RN, Pediatric Cardiovascular
Surgical Nurse |
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What is your role at ACH, and how long
have you worked here?
I am a pediatric cardiovascular surgical nurse.
I have been at ACH for a total of six and a half
years – one and a half years as a patient
care tech in the CVICU and five years in CVOR.
Why is your job rewarding?
The most rewarding part of my job is watching the
fantastic surgeons that I have the pleasure of
working with transform these hearts from something
that doesn’t work well into functioning
hearts. It is an absolute miracle. I never thought
I would see a heart be totally removed from a
body and replaced with a brand new one. I am
rewarded everyday I go to work. No two surgeries
are ever the same; therefore, I learn something
new everyday. It’s great.
How did you become interested in Pediatric
Cardiovascular Surgery?
While I was in nursing school and working as a
tech on the unit, I became obsessed with what the
surgeons and their staff were able to do everyday.
I was always asking the nurses questions about
the defects and how they were corrected. I knew
that I wanted to make a difference in the lives
of the children and that somehow, I would one day
end up in the OR watching these miracles happen.
As luck would have it, I was approached by the
CVOR head nurse and was offered a job once I graduated
and passed my boards. I was so excited and accepted
the job immediately. I have been there ever since.
What do you want people to know
about the Cardiovascular Operating Room at Arkansas
Children’s Hospital?
The most important thing for everyone to know is
that this place is truly a place of care, love
and hope. My coworkers and I truly are passionate
about what we do and how we do it. We always strive
to do the best that we can to give the children
the best possible outcome. We are all confident
that we provide first class heart surgery with
two of the best pediatric cardiothoracic surgeons
in the world.
What do you enjoy most about working with
children?
I have two children of my own. So I enjoy giving
the same type of care that I hope both of my boys
would receive. I enjoy giving a service that not
everyone is willing to provide.
What has been your most memorable
moment working in the CVOR at Arkansas Children’s
Hospital?
My most memorable moment is everyday that I come
to work. Every morning, I look forward seeing the
people that I work with. It’s like spending
time with extended family. I am a part of
a great team of dedicated people who love what
they do and are the best at it. My job, next to
my two boys, is the best part of my life. It gives
me great satisfaction in knowing that I change
the life of a patient everyday. Those are the greatest
memories to me. The ones that I create every day.

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