With the Senning surgical repair, a baffle – or conduit - is created within the atria that reroutes the deoxygenated blood coming from the inferior and superior vena cavae to the
mitral valve and therefore to the pulmonary circulation This is accomplished by creating a systemic venous conduit that channels deoxygenated blood from the superior and
inferior vena cava towards the mitral valve. After this complex plastic reconstruction using flaps from the right atrial tissue and the
interatrial septum, it lets the oxygenated pulmonary venous blood flow to the
tricuspid valve and from there to the systemic circulation. The anatomic left ventricle continues to pump into the
pulmonary circulation and the anatomic right ventricle will work as the systemic pump, in other words, the ventriculo-arterial mismatch is left unrepaired. In the Senning's operation, atrial tissue is used to create the baffle. No prosthetic material is introduced. A complex work of incising and refolding the native atrial tissue - which is so technically complex that has been referred to as "origami", is necessary to build the venous baffle. Indeed, the Senning technique was difficult to reproduce and was not widely embraced. In 1963, Mustard described an alternative technique, the
Mustard procedure, in which the atrial septum is excised, and the atrial baffle is created by the placement of a single elephant trunk-shaped patch made of pericardial tissue. This technique then became the standard operation for TGA as it was technically less demanding. == Alternative surgical techniques ==