Reinterventions after repair of common arterial trunk in neonates and young infants
Doff B. McElhinney, MDa,
Hiranya A. Rajasinghe, MDa,
Bassem N. Mora, MDa,
V. Mohan Reddy, MDa,
Norman H. Silverman, MDa and
Frank L. Hanley, MDa
a Divisions of Cardiothoracic Surgery and Pediatric Cardiology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA

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Figure 1 Actuarial freedom from first, second and third reinterventions among hospital survivors after repair of common arterial trunk in early infancy.
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Figure 2 Panel A shows actuarial freedom from first, second and third conduit reinterventions among hospital survivors after repair of common arterial trunk in early infancy. Panel B shows actuarial freedom from conduit reintervention among patients who underwent placement of xenograft and allograft valves in the right ventricular outflow tract at the time of repair of common arterial trunk.
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Figure 3 Actuarial freedom from reintervention on the truncal valve among hospital survivors after repair of common arterial trunk in early infancy.
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Figure 4 Actuarial freedom from reintervention for residual ventricular septal defect (VSD) and stenosis of the branch pulmonary arteries (PA) among hospital survivors after repair of common arterial trunk in early infancy.
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