Radionuclide studies in postoperative evaluation of the Fontan procedure

Abstract
Radionuclide studies were performed on 12 patients who had had a Fontan operation for cyanotic congenital heart disease, six of whom had undergone a prior palliative Glenn procedure. The patients without prior Glenn anastomoses were studied by radionuclide first-pass angiocardiography, using a right antecubital vein injection of 99mTc pertechnetate. The patients with Glenn anastomoses required two injections, one by femoral vein to study the Fontan procedure, using bolus injection of 99mTc pertechnetate or microspheres, and the second by right antecubital vein to study the Glenn anastomosis and right lung, using a bolus of microspheres. Gated cardiac blood-pool scintigraphy was used to measure right atrial and left ventricular ejection fraction in three patients. In nine patients, contrast angiography confirmed that these techniques allowed recognition of residual right-to-left shunts, right atrial stasis, right atrial outflow obstructions, left ventricular dysfunction, and right lung arteriovenous fistulas. Noninvasive radionuclide methods seem to be dependable in the postoperative evaluation of patients after the Fontan procedure. First-pass angiocardiography is most helpful in evaluating the dynamics and distribution of blood flow, especially the right atrial output, and gated blood-pool scintigraphy offers a better evaluation of right atrial and left ventricular contraction, so both supply complementary information.