01/28/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/28/2025 20:19
"Our goal is to do the difficult and the impossible," says Yves d'Udekem, M.D., Ph.D.
"Our goal is to do the difficult and the impossible," says Yves d'Udekem, M.D., Ph.D., chief of Cardiac Surgery at Children's National Hospital.
Dr. d'Udekem and the cardiac surgeons at Children's National apply technical skill and expertise to offer renewed hope for the highest risk children with critical congenital heart disease, including those with single ventricle anomalies like hypoplastic left heart syndrome.
"When families have nowhere else to turn, they can turn to us," he adds.
Why it matters
The cardiac surgery team has welcomed families from across the United States and around the world who seek experts in the care of these critical heart conditions. Their experience is building an important evidence base for better surgical approaches that will improve long-term outcomes for children with many different types of congenital heart disease, but especially for single ventricle conditions.
Innovation in cardiac surgery
Children's National leads the way
"It's time to combine firsthand expertise and long-term outcomes from decades of congenital heart surgical procedures to refine our surgical techniques," says Dr. d'Udekem. "We need to ensure patients with congenital heart disease, especially those with single ventricle heart defects, can thrive long term."
Soon, the Children's National team plans to re-examine the effectiveness of different techniques for the Fontan procedure. They'll compare an extracardiac approach against the older lateral tunnel procedure to determine how best to reduce long-term pressure on the heart by creating larger conduits and improving blood flow.
More education is needed to ensure valve repairs for children with congenital heart disease, including single ventricle conditions, which have a high rate of failure and require reoperation, are as successful as can be. The goal is to avoid the need for reoperation or replacement procedures. This is why Children's National recently hosted the inaugural Valve Repair Symposium. It featured practical cases illustrated with intraoperative video, echocardiography and MR images to bring critical knowledge about pediatric heart valve repair to more people in the field.