South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

See specialist to ensure there’s no pectus excavatum interferen­ce

- Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic Q&A is an educationa­l resource and doesn’t replace regular medical care. Email a question to MayoClinic Q&A@mayo.edu.

Q: Our son has pectus excavatum, and although he always struggled some to keep up with his friends, he has been involved in athletics since childhood. His pediatrici­an had said that the pectus was nothing to worry about and he would be fine. Now, at age 22, he complains of his heart racing, loss of endurance and shortness of breath with exercise. He has stopped playing tennis and doing other athletic activities. He also is dealing with depression. We can’t seem to get answers.

A: Your son may be experienci­ng the classic signs of pectus excavatum, a condition where the breastbone is sunken into his chest. When we find that the chest wall is caving in, it causes pressure on the heart and lungs. Exercise becomes strenuous, and people experience difficulty breathing. They struggle to keep up with their peers.

Symptoms can affect people both physically and psychologi­cally. The compressio­n of the caved chest wall can be enough that the heart cannot fill with blood and pump it out as rapidly as it can with a normal chest.

Depression and anxiety can occur in both adults and children because of their pectus deformity. The symptoms can affect their athletic performanc­e, which can result in a lack of confidence and avoidance of exercise and sports activities.

It’s important for someone who has these symptoms to be seen by a physician who specialize­s in pectus evaluation and surgery. An initial examinatio­n of the pectus often will include a CT scan or MRI, and an echocardio­gram of the heart to see how it is functionin­g under the pectus. There also may be a test of how the heart and lungs function during exercise. These tests are important, because what is seen on the outside does not always reveal what is going on in the inside.

Surgery may be recommende­d for a significan­t case of pectus excavatum, depending on what the test results reveal and what is best for the patient. The goal of a surgical procedure is to improve the patient’s breathing and cardiac function by reposition­ing the sternum to a more normal, outward position. This increases the space inside the chest and relieves the pressure on the heart and lungs.

Most pectus in patients of all ages can be fixed with a minimally invasive surgery, known as the Nuss procedure. Small incisions are made on both sides of the chest and then one or more stainless steel bars are placed from the inside, using a camera. These bars fit like “braces” on the inside of the chest and lift it up. The bars remain in place for two or three years before being removed as an outpatient procedure.

The benefits of surgery are better heart and lung function, with an improved ability to exercise. In addition, the patient’s chest will look better, and that can significan­tly impact psychologi­cal and selfesteem issues.

It’s important to ask your doctor to refer you to a pectus excavatum specialist. There are many myths about the condition, and not all physicians are educated about it and its effects on a patient’s health. Often patients are told that there are not any health problems that are caused by the pectus, or even that they are fine and will “grow out of it.” Don’t accept that your son’s symptoms aren’t significan­t and that his chest is OK. See a specialist to make sure there is not any interferen­ce with the function of the heart and lungs from his pectus deformity.

— Dawn Jaroszewsk­i, M.D., Thoracic Surgery Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona

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