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Grech V,1 DeGiovanni JV.2
Flipper coil closure of patent ductus arteriosus. Images Paediatr Cardiol
2007;31:1-15
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1Paediatric Department, St. Luke's Hospital, Guardamangia, Malta |
| 2Cardiology Department, Birmingham Children's Hospital, UK |
| Heart Defects, Congenital | Ductus Arteriosus, Patent | Heart Catheterization/Instrumentation |
| Embolization, Therapeutic, Instrumentation | Radiography, Interventional |
Abstract
Transcatheter closure of patent ductus arteriosus is now a well established
therapeutic option. In this paper, we illustrate step by step the technique
of Flipper coil closure of small (<3mm) ducts.
Article
Introduction
Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is a persistent normal fetal structure
that connects the left pulmonary artery and the descending aorta. The ductus
closes spontaneously within hours or days of birth and persistence of this
structure beyond 10 days of life is considered abnormal. This lesion comprises
5-10% of all congenital heart defects (excluding PDA associated with prematurity).
The available retrospective data on the natural history of untreated PDA
are poor but morbidity and mortality rates are directly related to the
flow volume through the PDA. Small ducts are usually asymptomatic as they
cause a very minor degree of left to right shunting with minimal ventricular
volume overload. Spontaneous closure after three months of age is rare
and bacterial endocarditis is a potential risk. For these reasons, small
ducts that are still present by two years of age or are diagnosed – often
incidentally – after two years of age are closed electively.
This article will detail how a small duct (up to 3mm diameter) can be occluded with a Flipper (Cook) detachable coil.1 Larger ducts should be occluded with an Amplatzer PDA plug.
Coils
The coil occlusion technique has been used for embolisation purposes
in various sites of the body since 1972. Coil closure of PDA was first
achieved in 1992 using Gianturco coils (see below).2 The embolisation
principle is simple in that the loops of the coil chosen for any particular
PDA are larger than the diameter of the PDA. When the coil is deployed,
loops placed on each side of the PDA (in the pulmonary and the aortic end)
hold the coil in position through the coil’s inherent spring effect and
in a short while, the coil fibres promote clot formation which eliminates
flow through the PDA. The coil and clot are then endothelialised.
Flipper coils are stainless steel spring wires coated with tetrafluoroethyline and lined with synthetic Dacron fibres over their entire length. They are first deployed and then detached (unscrewed) off the delivery wire. This permits retrieval of the coil if the delivery position is unsatisfactory. This is in contrast to the classical Gianturco coils which are pushed out of a delivery catheter by a coil pusher wire and once deployed, cannot be retrieved except by a snare and are therefore nondetachable.
Coils come in several sizes and the useful sizes include 3 by 3, 3 by 4, 3 by 5, 5 by 3, 5 by 4, 5 by 5, 6.5 by 3, 6.5 by 4, 6.5 by 5 where the first figure is the coil loop diameter in mm and the second figure is the number of loops that comprise the coil. Larger sizes are available (8 by 3, 8 by 4, 8 by 5) but are not widely used. The coil diameter chosen should be twice that of the PDA diameter at its narrowest point. The number of loops chosen depends on the size of the ductal ampulla at the aortic end – the deeper the ampulla, the larger the number of coils that can be packed into it.
Method
The femoral artery is entered with a 4F sheath and antibiotics and
heparin (100u/kg bolus) are given. A 4F pigtail is passed up the aorta
next to the PDA. The tube orientation is turned to 90 degrees and conventionally,
this is the LAO position with the ascending aorta anteriorly. A descending
aortogram is obtained (1ml/kg over 1 second up to a volume of 40ml) and
a suitable image showing the duct is frozen on a slave monitor and the
narrowest diameter of the duct is measured. It is useful to remember the
position of the duct relative to the trachea for orientation purposes.
Once the duct is crossed, the wire is pushed into the main pulmonary artery (PA). Ectopics imply that the wire has entered the right ventricle and the wire should be withdrawn to the pulmonary artery so as to avoid damaging the pulmonary valve. The catheter is removed leaving only the wire in the pulmonary artery.
The 4F sheath is then replaced by an appropriately sized sheath. The
Flipper coil consists of an 0.038’’ wire but passes through an 0.041’’
lumen due to its bristles. The smallest catheter that it passes through
is the Cook PDA catheter and the Microvena 4F snare catheter. These have
a large lumen at the expense of stiff but thin walls that kink easily.
A conventional catheter alternative is a 6F JR 4 guiding catheter. However,
this will cause substantial bleeding around the delivery system unless
used with a haemostatic valve, such as a Tuohy-Borst adapter (Cook) which
is specifically designed to prevent the backflow of fluid around an instrument
inserted through the adaptor’s working channel.

The coil delivery catheter is pushed over the exchange wire into the
pulmonary artery and the exchange wire is then pulled out.


The movement of the mandrel can be seen in this animation (figure 7).




When the coil is in a satisfactorily position, the delivery wire is
slowly unscrewed from the torquer to release the coil. If, while unscrewing,
the aspect of the coil begins to change, one should pause to let the delivery
cable catch up in the unscrewing with the coil.
When the coil is released, delivery wire should be pulled back into
the catheter so as to avoid tears or perforations of the aorta. Once released,
the coil may need further packing into the ampulla with the help of the
delivery catheter. The aortogram is repeated using the pigtail.
Care should be taken not to catch the pigtail on the coil while retrieving
the pigtail - the pigtail should be straightened out with the exchange
wire.
Small ducts in adult patients may be difficult to cross because of lack
of catheter support due to the large aorta (figure 16).

Similarly, very small PDAs – and these are usually silent ducts – may
prove virtually impossible to cross, even with a wire. The case shown in
figure 17 was one of these.








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