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1 ge, 13-17 years; 24 girls; 18 with palliated single ventricle).
2 cases of hypoplastic left heart syndrome and single ventricle.
3 mproved patient outcomes for patients with a single ventricle.
4 eloped for the palliation of children with a single ventricle.
5 m and extends along the entire length of the single ventricle.
6 erm advantage for patients with a functional single ventricle.
7 cal management of patients with a functional single ventricle.
8 intensive care management of patients with a single ventricle.
9  are less well understood in patients with a single ventricle.
10 procedures were performed in patients with a single ventricle.
11 <0.001) but not in children with a palliated single ventricle.
12 g HT evaluation in children with a palliated single ventricle.
13  the first years of life among patients with single ventricle.
14 erformance in young patients with functional single ventricles.
15 tive palliation for patients with functional single ventricles.
16 s performed in 35 patients with a functional single ventricle (1 week to 12 years old) at various sta
17 T burden was highest in complex CHD, such as single ventricle (22.8%) and d-transposition of the grea
18                   Primary diagnosis included single ventricle (36%), d-transposition of the great art
19 .0% (95% confidence interval, 32.6 to 43.5); single ventricle, 56.1% (95% confidence interval, 49.9 t
20                           Diagnoses included single ventricle (74%), Kawasaki disease (14%), and othe
21                                 Infants with single ventricle anatomy and ductal-dependent pulmonary
22                                Patients with single ventricle anatomy and ductal-dependent pulmonary
23 ast decade, as the majority of patients with single ventricle anatomy who have undergone the Fontan o
24                             In patients with single-ventricle anatomy and ductal-dependent pulmonary
25 0 feet) were analyzed for patients born with single-ventricle anatomy who would now be of adult age.
26                         Of 149 patients with single-ventricle anatomy, 103 underwent the Fontan proce
27 t highest risk are infants with a functional single ventricle and patients with suprasystemic pulmona
28 ot, four with Ebstein's anomaly and two with single ventricle and pulmonary stenosis.
29            She was diagnosed with functional single ventricle and very limited pulmonary blood flow.
30  The cohort included 118 (11%) patients with single ventricle and/or Fontan physiology, 87 (8%) patie
31 great arteries, 123 tetralogy of Fallot, 132 single ventricle, and 130 other CHD).
32 ties are commonly present in patients with a single ventricle, and detection of these lesions increas
33 ultivariate analysis, weight <4 kg, having a single ventricle, and emergency status were significantl
34 pulmonary atresia intact ventricular septum, single ventricle, and tricuspid atresia born in 1996 to
35 ence of a large ventricular septal defect, a single-ventricle approach to repair should be considered
36  and performance changes occur in functional single ventricles as they progress through staged Fontan
37 d randomized clinical trials in infants with single ventricle CHD and 270 controls from The Cancer Ge
38       Several CNVs likely to be causative of single ventricle CHD were observed, including aberration
39 with transposition of the great arteries and single-ventricle CHD (median: 1.63 [IQR: 0.56-3.27] in t
40            Males and children with severe or single-ventricle CHD demonstrated higher incidence rates
41 vival was similar for biventricular and most single-ventricle CHD patients, and notably better for bi
42 t arteries and median: 1.28 [IQR: 0-2.42] in single-ventricle CHD) compared with 2-ventricle CHD (med
43 with CHD and destigmatizing most subtypes of single-ventricle CHD.
44 uals with transposition of great arteries or single-ventricle CHD.
45 y portend impaired functional reserve of the single-ventricle circulation.
46 s associated with lower WM other than in the single ventricle cohort, where VAD was associated with h
47  lack of information, gaps in clinical care, single ventricle complications, and heart failure in the
48 stemic circulation in neonatal patients with single ventricle congenital heart defects, but this comp
49                                              Single ventricle congenital heart disease like hypoplast
50 brane oxygenation or mechanical ventilation, single ventricle congenital heart disease on VAD support
51 iomyopathies; resuscitation of patients with single ventricle congenital heart disease; management of
52 eric scaffolds, hold promise toward treating single-ventricle congenital heart defects (SVCHDs).
53  Without large-scale analyses of adults with single-ventricle congenital heart disease (CHD) undergoi
54 tion to innate abnormalities associated with single-ventricle congenital heart disease exposes these
55 peration is the current standard of care for single-ventricle congenital heart disease.
56 heart surgeries currently performed to treat single-ventricle congenital heart disease.
57 clude atrioventricular septal defects, DORV, single ventricle defects as well as abnormal position of
58                                Patients with single ventricle defects undergoing the Fontan procedure
59 ticles regarding management of newborns with single-ventricle defects have been published during the
60 rience in newborns undergoing palliation for single-ventricle defects, in particular, hypoplastic lef
61                                        Other single-ventricle defects, transposition of the great art
62                                            A single ventricle diagnosis (P=0.06), longer postoperativ
63 c Surgery (STAT) category, site, admit time, single-ventricle diagnosis, Vasoactive-Inotropic Score,
64 or whom SCPC was performed for palliation of single ventricle disease who underwent chest MRI between
65 n coarctation of the aorta, late outcomes in single-ventricle disease, cognitive and psychiatric issu
66 y/plastic bronchitis (HR: 2.37; P = 0.0082), single-ventricle end-diastolic volume index >104 mL/m(2)
67                              Patients with a single ventricle experience a high rate of brain injury
68 ress test results of all preadolescents with single ventricle Fontan physiology.
69 g improves aerobic capacity in patients with single ventricle Fontan physiology.
70 and predictive value of EOV in patients with single ventricle Fontan physiology.
71                   Morbidity in patients with single-ventricle Fontan circulation is common and includ
72 enic CNVs seem to contribute to the cause of single ventricle forms of CHD in >/=10% of cases and are
73 gement strategy for patients with functional single ventricle has evolved to include staging bidirect
74                      Infants with functional single ventricle have a high risk of death during the ea
75                              Patients with a single ventricle have multiple risk factors for central
76 ts with congenital heart disease, those with single ventricles have the highest risk of early mortali
77 ; P<0.001) but not in those with a palliated single ventricle (hazard ratio, 1.3; 95% confidence inte
78                                Children with single ventricle heart disease (SVHD) experience morbidi
79                                Patients with single ventricle heart disease (SVHD) require multiple p
80 ing patient, who had borderline functionally single ventricle heart disease (unbalanced atrioventricu
81                         Most candidates have single ventricle heart disease and limited transvenous o
82 ailure (FCF) is a chronic state in palliated single ventricle heart disease with high morbidity and m
83  palliative technique for patients born with single ventricle heart disease.
84 ndrome (n = 10) or other forms of functional single-ventricle heart (n = 19).
85 ported to improve outcomes for patients with single-ventricle heart disease during the period between
86 ontan procedure, the prognosis of congenital single-ventricle heart disease has improved, with many a
87 nent among males and children with severe or single-ventricle heart disease.
88 ocus of improving outcomes for patients with single-ventricle heart disease.
89 ptal defects [ASD], aortic arch defects, and single-ventricle heart) and subgroups of specific heart
90 cedure for the palliation of patients with a single-ventricle heart, there have been very few reports
91        Advances in the care of children with single ventricle hearts have resulted in remarkably impr
92 extrocardia), ventral looping and no looping/single ventricle hearts.
93        Surgical strategies for patients with single ventricle include intermediate staging or early F
94   This review suggests that the diagnosis of single ventricle, initiation of ECMO in the operating ro
95  factors: age, ventricular morphology (right single ventricle, left single ventricle [RV/LV]), fenest
96  (MBT) shunt, the first palliative stage for single-ventricle lesions with systemic outflow obstructi
97 ren who had undergone Fontan corrections for single-ventricle lesions.
98 icular repair and which are better served by single ventricle management.
99                     The long-term outcome of single-ventricle management in these patients is not kno
100 n young pediatric patients with a functional single ventricle, matrix-array 3DE measurements of mass
101 odes of strain-curve variation regardless of single ventricle morphology and type of strain investiga
102 entricular septal defect (n=3), functionally single ventricle (n=3) and ventricular septal defect wit
103 s anomaly (n=44), septal defects (n=39), and single ventricle (n=36).
104  We then compared our subcohort of high-risk single ventricle neonates palliated with PFRs with a sim
105 d cerebral blood oxygenation in fetuses with single ventricle or aortic obstruction.
106                                    Long-term single-ventricle outcomes among neonatal survivors of th
107 al defect in 95% (n = 142 of 149), and prior single ventricle palliation in 68% (n = 89 of 149).
108  perioperative implications of the stages of single ventricle palliation is critical.
109 proposed as a means of improving outcomes of single ventricle palliation.
110 diameter was pre-specified for patients with single ventricle palliation.
111 tients with LH hypoplasia who have undergone single-ventricle palliation (SVP).
112 the entire population of newborns undergoing single-ventricle palliation are unclear.
113                 In infants requiring 3-stage single-ventricle palliation for hypoplastic left heart s
114 urgical management consisted of a functional single-ventricle palliation in 38 patients (83%) and biv
115                                       Failed single-ventricle palliation is a growing indication for
116 nd of a spectrum of LV hypoplasia, mandating single-ventricle palliation or cardiac transplantation.
117 pair: 7 g/dL (biventricular repair), 9 g/dL (single-ventricle palliation), or 7 to 9 g/dL (uncorrecte
118 nital heart surgery, especially after failed single-ventricle palliation, is presenting new obstacles
119 e Fontan is typically not the final stage of single-ventricle palliation.
120               All 134 patients had a form of single ventricle pathological anatomy.
121 articular interest, conduit reoperations and single ventricle pathway modifications are still an art
122 ne arrhythmic death related to asystole in a single ventricle patient.
123 ary collateral (SPC) flow occurs commonly in single ventricle patients after superior cavo-pulmonary
124 lmonary arterial collateral (SPC) vessels in single ventricle patients are poorly understood.
125                                              Single ventricle patients not requiring an intervention
126 tment with phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors in single ventricle patients with heart failure, including
127 on is routinely used as a diagnostic tool in single ventricle patients with superior cavopulmonary co
128 rends toward worse outcomes were observed in single ventricle patients, biventricular patients with l
129 ion of VADs in complex circulations, such as single ventricle patients, remains infrequent and is ass
130 Model performance was lowest in functionally single ventricle patients.
131 inition 1, 86% for definition 2, and 75% for single ventricle patients.
132 edback mechanisms, 12 intubated, ventilated, single-ventricle patients in SCPC physiology (age 2.2+/-
133               Compared to biventricular CHD, single-ventricle patients showed significantly reduced s
134 the total cavopulmonary connection (TCPC) in single-ventricle patients undergoing Fontan can be calcu
135                                           In single-ventricle patients, a staged approach is employed
136 tients exhibited similar 10-year survival as single-ventricle patients, except for those with hypopla
137 s display severe OFT and RV hypoplasia and a single ventricle phenotype due to decreased proliferatio
138                The most common diagnosis was single ventricle physiology (52%), 9 palliated by Fontan
139 logy of Fallot (n=8), cor triatriatum (n=7), single ventricle physiology (n=2), among others.
140  standardized segmentation for patients with single ventricle physiology across multiple centers.
141 ties may progress in select individuals with single ventricle physiology after Fontan completion, and
142                                              Single ventricle physiology and failure to separate from
143          Newborns with prenatal diagnosis of single ventricle physiology and transposition of the gre
144                        Current approaches to single ventricle physiology as well as areas of controve
145 operation improves survival in patients with single ventricle physiology but is associated with Fonta
146 T FINDINGS: Infants following palliation for single ventricle physiology have persistent growth failu
147 livery of adequate nutrition in infants with single ventricle physiology is essential to improve outc
148 ents undergoing cavopulmonary palliation for single ventricle physiology may be impacted by living at
149 cess for transvenous ventricular pacing (eg, single ventricle physiology or Eisenmenger syndrome), th
150                   In multivariable analysis, single ventricle physiology was associated with worse mo
151 e whether pathogenic CNVs among infants with single ventricle physiology were associated with inferio
152 with transposition of the great arteries and single ventricle physiology were included in this analys
153 n is particularly relevant for patients with single ventricle physiology who often develop Fontan-ass
154  atrial septal defects, tetralogy of Fallot, single ventricle physiology, and following cardiac trans
155 heart malformations are those with so-called single ventricle physiology, in which there is only one
156 ndergoing Fontan procedures as palliation of single ventricle physiology, the addition of a fenestrat
157 of congenital heart defects characterized by single ventricle physiology, yet it predisposes individu
158 rvival and quality of life for patients with single ventricle physiology.
159 tion is performed for surgical palliation of single ventricle physiology.
160  June 2012 to February 2023 in patients with single ventricle physiology.
161 d the management of children with functional single ventricle physiology.
162 ant improvement in survival of patients with single ventricle physiology.
163 ansposition of the great arteries and 57 had single ventricle physiology.
164 heart disease, and 80% of these patients had single ventricle physiology.
165 n patients with systemic right ventricles or single ventricle physiology.
166 .3]) underwent a PFR procedure; 15 (88%) had single ventricle physiology; 15 (88%) were high-risk sur
167 espiratory support; 4) expanding research of single ventricle physiology; 5) advances in the treatmen
168             In particular, all patients with single- ventricle physiology currently undergo diagnosti
169  (hazard ratio, 3.66; 95% CI, 2.26-5.92) and single-ventricle physiology (hazard ratio, 1.98; 95% CI,
170 erformance in children and young adults with single-ventricle physiology after the Fontan operation.
171       PL through the TCPC may play a role in single-ventricle physiology and is a function of cardiac
172 odynamically detrimental in circumstances of single-ventricle physiology and should be used with caut
173 zation is standard practice in patients with single-ventricle physiology before bidirectional Glenn a
174                 First, the standard model of single-ventricle physiology can be reexpressed in a form
175       Among adult CHD transplant recipients, single-ventricle physiology correlated with higher short
176                       In neonatal lambs with single-ventricle physiology created in utero, epinephrin
177 iorespiratory deterioration in children with single-ventricle physiology during their interstage hosp
178 ratory deterioration events in children with single-ventricle physiology during their interstage peri
179                 The lack of animal models of single-ventricle physiology has hindered the understandi
180                                Patients with single-ventricle physiology have a significant risk of c
181               Children and young adults with single-ventricle physiology have abnormal exercise capac
182                                 Infants with single-ventricle physiology have poor growth and are at
183        Bone marrow transplant recipients and single-ventricle physiology have the poorest outcomes.
184  Administration of enalapril to infants with single-ventricle physiology in the first year of life di
185                                              Single-ventricle physiology is characterized by parallel
186 ouble-blind trial involving 230 infants with single-ventricle physiology randomized to receive enalap
187                       Five-year survival for single-ventricle physiology was 47.2% (95% CI, 34.3-59.1
188         A reproducible fetal animal model of single-ventricle physiology was created to examine the e
189            Of 110 neonates with functionally single-ventricle physiology who underwent stage I pallia
190  volumes and mass in pediatric patients with single-ventricle physiology would aid clinical managemen
191 lnerability indicators, renal insufficiency, single-ventricle physiology, and coagulation disorder.
192 ly fatal disorder occurring in children with single-ventricle physiology, and other diseases, as well
193 tors for reintervention included anticipated single-ventricle physiology, lack of prior balloon pulmo
194 rdization: patient age, renal insufficiency, single-ventricle physiology, procedure-type risk group,
195 osition of the great arteries and 12 who had single-ventricle physiology--with the use of magnetic re
196 ion of complex congenital heart disease with single-ventricle physiology.
197  the goal in the management of patients with single-ventricle physiology.
198  doses in the resuscitation of patients with single-ventricle physiology.
199 ll enable better management of patients with single-ventricle physiology.
200 ollected physiological data of subjects with single-ventricle physiology.
201 ransplant recipients with CHD, 185 (48%) had single-ventricle physiology.
202 ratification and surgical decision-making in single-ventricle physiology.
203 l after surgical palliation in children with single-ventricle physiology.
204 is a successful palliation for children with single-ventricle physiology; however, many will eventual
205 ted the most from this progress has been the single-ventricle population.
206  from both the Pediatric Heart Network (PHN) Single Ventricle Reconstruction (SVR) trial and Extensio
207          The Pediatric Heart Network's (PHN) single ventricle reconstruction (SVR) trial compared shu
208                The Pediatric Heart Network's Single Ventricle Reconstruction (SVR) trial randomized i
209                                          The Single Ventricle Reconstruction (SVR) trial randomized s
210                                       In the Single Ventricle Reconstruction (SVR) trial, 1-year tran
211 e physiologic requirements for success after single ventricle reconstruction has resulted in dramatic
212                                       As the Single Ventricle Reconstruction study was based on the i
213 th of stay using the Pediatric Heart Network Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial dataset.
214                              Since 2010, the Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial has matured and ha
215 Examining the available data in light of the Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial is insightful as f
216                                       In the Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial of the Norwood pro
217  and Blood Institute Pediatric Heart Network Single Ventricle Reconstruction Trial public data set wa
218                      The multi-institutional Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial randomly assigned
219 dary analysis of the Pediatric Heart Network Single Ventricle Reconstruction trial.
220  549 participants enrolled in the SVR trial (Single Ventricle Reconstruction), 200 of the 237 SVRIII
221                            In the SVR trial (Single Ventricle Reconstruction), newborns with hypoplas
222  multi-institutional Pediatric Heart Network Single-Ventricle Reconstruction Trial, interstage mortal
223 epair (closure of septal defects) instead of single-ventricle repair (Norwood palliation and Fontan o
224                                 Infants with single ventricle require staged cardiac surgery, with st
225 lar morphology (right single ventricle, left single ventricle [RV/LV]), fenestration open (FO) or clo
226                                Patients with single-ventricle, shunt-dependent physiology are at incr
227 ations for surgical palliation of functional single ventricle since the initial report by Fontan and
228 hypoplastic left heart syndrome after staged single ventricle surgical palliation.
229 tality rate and an increase in the number of single-ventricle survivors.
230  with CHD were categorized into those with a single ventricle (SV) or two ventricles (TVs) and those
231 dies in zebrafish, a lower vertebrate with a single ventricle, that latent TGF-beta binding protein 3
232 monary artery shunt alone in patients with a single ventricle to facilitate ventricular volume unload
233 e 5-year survival in infants with functional single ventricle, to define factors associated with surv
234 nts (median age, 7 months) with a functional single ventricle undergoing CMR under general anesthesia
235 ional echocardiography (3DE) measurements of single-ventricle volumes, mass, and ejection fraction wi
236                                              Single ventricle was the pretransplantation diagnosis fo
237                           Patients who had a single ventricle, weight <4 kg, or who underwent an emer
238                              Patients with a single ventricle were studied with magnetic resonance im
239                          Preadolescents with single ventricle who undergo volume unloading surgery at

 
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