Interventional fetal balloon valvuloplasty for congenital heart disease - Current shortcomings and possible perspectives

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Abstract

Fetal cardiac interventions are new and relatively unknown investigational options for modifying congenital heart disease in utero. Techniques for safer access to the fetus must be improved, and selection criteria for patients for whom these procedures are potentially beneficial must be developed. Currently, antenatal cardiac intervention attempts are being made to either prevent or reverse hydrops in fetuses with cardiac valve disease or outflow tract obstruction or to recruit hypoplastic ventricles. Most important are early detection and referral of these fetuses, thereby enabling timely procedures with improved outcomes. However, performing successful fetal cardiac interventions requires multidisciplinary collaboration between obstetricians, pediatric cardiologists, pediatric cardiac surgeons, and anesthesiologists, as each discipline provides specific skills for these critically ill babies. © Springer-Verlag 2005.

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APA

Meyer-Wittkopf, M., Kaulitz, R., Abele, H., Schauf, B., Hofbeck, M., & Wallwiener, D. (2005). Interventional fetal balloon valvuloplasty for congenital heart disease - Current shortcomings and possible perspectives. Gynecological Surgery, 2(2), 113–118. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10397-005-0090-z

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