pubmed-article:15818359 | pubmed:abstractText | In congenitally corrected transposition (ccTGA) the most common configuration is atrial situs solitus with left ventricular loop and left transposition of the great arteries (SLL). Less common is ccTGA with atrial siti inversus (IDD). In both configurations there is a high incidence of ventricular septal defect, pulmonary stenosis, or atresia and some anatomic abnormality of the morphologic tricuspid valve (mTV). The morphologic right ventricle (mRV) is the systemic ventricle and prone to premature failure, particularly in the presence of early TV regurgitation, atrial arrhythmias conduction defects, and prior surgical ventricular septal defect closure. With a long experience with the Senning operation and then the arterial switch, it seemed feasible that these could be combined in ccTGA to restore the mLV to the systemic circuit. This was first attempted in 1989 by the author and was successful. Many of the more recently graduated congenital heart surgeons have little or no experience with the inflow switch. For this reason, the author was asked to write this article, accenting the technical details of the inflow switch. The author uses the Senning operation, with those modifications needed to accommodate the differences between the morphologic right atrium, conduction system, and quite frequent discordance between the atrial situs and the position of the apex of the heart, in ccTGA as compared with TGA. | lld:pubmed |