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Congenital Heart Disease

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Page 1: Congenital Heart Disease - No Slide Title

Congenital Heart Disease

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Incidence of 1% in general population.VSD is most common CHDTOF is most common cyanotic CHDTGA is most common cyanotic CHD presenting in infancy

Etiology: Multifactorial inheritance 90%.Chromosomal 5%Single mutant gene 3%Environmental 2%

Incidence and Etiology

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Presentations

Asymptomatic heart murmerCyanosisCongestive heart failureSyncopeShock

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CHD in Chromosomal Aberrations

Incidence Most common lesionTrisomy 21 50% VSD or A-V canalTrisomy 18 90+% VSDTrisomy 13 90% VSDXO Turner 35% CoA

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CHD in Single MutantGene Syndromes

Marfan’s Aortic aneurysmNoonan’s PS, ASDWilliams’ Supravalvular ASHolt-Oram ASD, VSDNF PS, CoA

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Teratogens and CHD

Frequency Most commonAlcohol 25-30% VSDPhenytoin 2-3% PS,AS,CoA,PDALithium 10% EbsteinRubella 35% PPS, PDADiabetes 3-5% Hypertrophic septum

TGA, VSD, CoA(Incidence can be as high as 30-50% in poorlycontrolled DM)Lupus 50% 3rd degree heart blockPKU 25-50% TOF, VSD, ASD

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Presentations

Asymptomatic (heart murmur) Small VSD, ASDCyanosis D-TGA, TOFCongestive heart failure Large L-R shunt

lesionsSyncope AS, PSShock Coarc, hypoplastic

left heart

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Birth 2w 8w 4m 1y 3-5y Adolescence

VSD ASD|PDACoAASHLHSTOFTriA/SPATGATATAPVR

CHF

CHF

Shock

Shock

Shock

P. HTN

P. HTN

Often asymptomatic

Cyanosis CHF

CHF CHF/syncope/murmur

CHF/HTN

Shock/Cyanosis

Shock/Cyanosis

Cyanosis

Cyanosis/CHF

Shock/Cyanosis

HLHS=Hypoplastic left heart syndrome

TriA/S=Tricuspid atresia

CHF=Congestive heart failure

P.HTN=Pulmonary hypertension

FTT=Failure to thrive

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Cyanotic CHD

1. Truncus Arteriosus

2. Transposition of the Great Arteries

3. Tricuspid Atresia

4. Tetralogy of Fallot

5. Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return

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Acyanotic CHD

1. VSD2. ASD3. PDA4. Coarctation Aorta5. Aortic Stenosis6. Hypoplastic Left Heart

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Cyanotic CHD with Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow

1. Tetralogy of Fallot2. Tricuspid Atresia3. Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return with obstruction

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Cyanotic CHD with Increased Pulmonary Blood Flow

1. Transposition of the Great Arteries2. Truncus Arteriosus 3. Total Anomalous Venous Return withoutobstruction

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Acyanotic CHD with IncreasedPulmonary Blood Flow (Volume Load)

1. ASD2. VSD3. PDA

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Acyanotic CHD with PulmonaryVenous Congestion or NormalBlood Flow (Pressure Load)

1. Coarctation Aorta2. Aortic Stenosis3. Hypoplastic Left Heart4. Pulmonary Stenosis

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Circulation beforebirth

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Circulationafter birth

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Cyanotic CHD with Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow

1. Tetralogy of Fallot2. Tricuspid Atresia

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Tetralogy of Fallot1. VSD2. Pulmonary artery stenosis3. Overriding aorta4. Right ventricular hypertrophy

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Tetralogy of Fallot

• Incidence of total CHD

• Age at presentation• Clinical

• Auscultation

• Most common cyanotic CHD

• Usually by 6 months• Cyanosis• Cyanotic spells (squatting)• Harsh systolic murmur• Softer if worsening

obstruction

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Tetralogy of Fallot

• Radiology

• EKG

• Decreased pulmonary vascularity

• Boot-shaped heart• R-sided aortic arch• RAD, RAE, RVH

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TOF treatment

1. For cyanotic spells: Knee-chest positionMorphine sulfateVasoconstrictorsPropranolol

2. Iron for anemia3. Surgicala. Palliation Blalock-Taussig

Waterston shuntPott’s operation

b. Corrective at 1-5 years of age

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Tetralogy of Fallot

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Tetralogy of Fallot

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Tricuspid Atresia

1. Normally related great arteries (69%)With small VSD and PS (most common).Intact septum with pulmonary atresiaLarge VSD without PS

2. D-transposition of great arteries (28%)

3. L-transposition of great arteries (4%)

Types

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Tricuspid Atresia• Incidence:• Age at presentation

• Clinical– No obstruction

pulmonary blood flow

– Obstruction pulmonary blood flow

• Rare• Infancy, depending on pulmonary

blood flow

• Congestive heart failure Similar to VSD Cyanosis

• Variable More intense cyanosis as ductus closes

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Tricuspid Atresia

• Auscultation: Systolic murmur with single S2

• Radiology:Variable Decreased pulmonary vasculature

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Treatment Tricuspid Atresia

1. PGE1 to keep ductus open2. Balloon septostomy if no VSD3. Surgicala. Palliation

systemic-pulmonary shunt (PS)pulmonary artery banding (large VSD)

b. CorrectiveFontan

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Cyanotic CHD with Increased Pulmonary Blood Flow

1. Truncus Arteriosus2. Transposition of the Great Arteries3. Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return

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Truncus Arteriosus• Incidence• Age at presentation• Clinical

• Auscultation• Pulmonary

vasculature• EKG

• Rare• Neonatal• Cyanosis• Signs of CHF• Wide pule pressure

and bounding arterial pulses

• Harsh systolic murmur• Increased• BVH or RVH

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Truncus Arteriosus

• Associations

• Treatment

• Right sided aortic arch• Thymic aplasia - DiGeorge

Syndrome• Medical• Pulmonary artery bending• Rastelli’s operation

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Truncus Arteriosus

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Transposition of the Great Vessels D-type

D-transposition, complete transposition, mostcommon form

-Aorta arises from the right ventricle.-Pulmonary artery arises from the left ventricle. -PDA is the only connection between systemic and pulmonary circulations, although VSD in 40%.

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Transposition of the Great Vessels L-type

L-transposition, also called corrected transposition

-Both ventricles and great vessels aretransposed

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D-TGA• Incidence

• Age presentation

• Clinical

• Auscultation• Radiology

• EKG

• 8% of all CHD• Male:female 2:1• Newborn, when ductus closes• Cyanosis within 1st 48 hrs if no

VSD• CHF when large left to right

shunts • Loud single S2, no murmur• Egg-on-a-string heart• Increased pulmonary

vasculature, depending on size shunt

• RVH

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Treatment for D-TGA

1. Prostaglandin E2. Surgicala. Atrial septostomy if no VSD (Rashkind, Blalock - Hanlon etc.)b. Anatomical correction (Jatene’s operation)

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TGA

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TAPVR types

1. Supracardiac emptying in the left verticalvein (most common type 80-90%) which subsequently drains into the SVC

2. Cardiac emptying into the coronary sinusor right atrium

3.Infradiaphragmatic emptying into verticalvein that descends through diaphragm intoportal vein and or IVC

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TAPVR

• Incidence• Age at

presentation• Clinical findings

• EKG• Radiology

• 2%• Newborn• Rapid cyanosis in the

infra-diaphragmatic type• Non-obstructive similar to

ASD plus mild cyanosis• RVH• “Snowman” configuration• Diffuse reticular opacities• Looks like HMD without

air bronchograms!

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TAPVR

• Associations

• Treatment

• Polysplenia• Asplenia (3/4 patients also

TAPVR)• Surgical ligation of anomalous

vein

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Total anomalous venous return

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Acyanotic CHD with Increased Pulmonary Blood Flow (left to right shunt lesions)

1. ASD2. VSD3. PDA

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ASD• Incidence• Types

• Age presentation

• Clinical

• Auscultation• EKG• Treatment

• 10% CHD• Ostium secundum (most

common)• Sinus venosus defect• Ostium primum (AV canal)• Varies• Mostly asymptomatic• Slender body build• Widely split and fixed S2! +

SEM• RAD and RVH• No SBE coverage needed!• Surgery for large shunts

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ASD

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VSD• Incidence

• Types

• Age presentation

• Most common CHD (20%)• Coexists with other lesions in

5%• Membranous (80%)• Muscular (10%)• Large - at age 2-3 months

with congestive failure• Small to moderate - usually

asymptomatic

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VSD

• Clinical

• Auscultation

• Congestive heart failure if large

• Poor weight gain• Systolic thrill with

holosystolic murmur at LLSB• Diastolic murmur with large

shunts and loud P2 with pulmonary hypertension

• Diastolic rumble at apex indicates CHF

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VSD• EKG

• Radiology

• Associations

• Complications

• 1. normal if small VSD• 2. LAE-LVH if moderate• 3. LAE-BVH if large• 4. RVH-PVOD• Increased vascularity with larger

shunts and enlargement cardiac size

• Holt-Oram syndrome, Down’s, Trisomy 13, Trisomy 18

• Eisenmenger’s Syndrome (shunt reverses to rightleft)

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Treatment VSD

1. Spontaneous closure of small VSD’s2. Medical therapy (diuretics, digitalis)3. Pulmonary artery banding4. Surgical placement of patch over VSD5. SBE prophylaxis

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VSD

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PDA

Clinical Premature infants - Congestiveheart failureTerm infants - usually asymp murmur

Pulm. Vasculature IncreasedRadiology Dependent on size of shunt

Left atrial enlargement often presentMassive bulge at left upper mediastinum inlarge shunts

Treatment Premature infants - IndomethacinLigation and division of the ductusProstaglandin E infusion maintains ductalpatency when needed

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PDA

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Acyanotic CHD with PulmonaryVenous Congestion or NormalBlood Flow (Pressure Load)

1. Coarctation Aorta2. Aortic Stenosis3. Hypoplastic Left Heart4. Pulmonary Stenosis

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Coarctation of the AortaIncidence: 5% of CHDClinical: Preductal or infantile type presents in

young child with CHF and LE pulsesAdult type presents with hypertension and difference in arm and leg pulses

Radiology: Rib notching - starts age 6-8Associations: Often isolated

Turner’s, NF, William’s, Sturge-WeberTreatment: Primary repair

Prostaglandin E to infants

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Rib notching

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Aortic Stenosis

Clinical: Most asymptomaticAnginaSyncope - may be fatal

Pulm. Vasc.: NormalAssociations: Williams’ SyndromeTreatment: Medical

SurgicalNo high impact sports

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Hypoplastic Left HeartIncidence: 8% of all CHD, most common cause for

early cardiac deathAge at present.: Immediately at birth or first weeksClinical: 1st presentation is usually not cyanosis,

but signs of shockPulm. Vasc.: IncreasedRadiology: Large cardiac silhouetteTreatment: Prostaglandin E

Norwood procedure (high mortality)

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Mitral Valve Prolapse FactsMore common in girls May be inherited as autosomal dominant trait withvariable expression Common in Marfan’s Dominant signs are ausculatory; late systolicapical murmur preceded by a click PVC’s may be a complication Non progressive in children Endocarditis prophylaxis indicated only insubstantiated cases, usually those with mitralinsufficiencies

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Blalock-Taussig shunt. The subclavian artery is transected

and anastomosed in a end-to-side fashion to the ipsilateral

pulmonary artery. Usually the subclavian artery opposite

to the arch is used.

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The Modified Blalock-Taussig shunt now uses a Goretex

graft (green) to connect the subclavian artery to the

pulmonary artery. This preserves the subclavian artery.

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Potts shunt is where a side-to-side anastomosis is made between the

descending aorta and the pulmonary artery.

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The Waterston-Cooley shunt is similar to the Potts shunt. A side to

side anastomosis or window is created between the pulmonary artery

and the ascending aorta. The difference is that it is the ascending

aorta (Waterston-Cooley) rather than the descending aorta which is

anastomosed to the pulmonary artery (Potts).

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Pearls

• Bounding pulses; think PDA or AV fistula.• Widely fixed split second heart tone; think

ASD.• No pre- and postductal saturation differences

– when there is total mixing of deoxygenated venous blood with oxygenated pulmonary blood in the heart; such as -total anomalous pulmonary venous return

-truncus arteriosus

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Pearls

• Pre- and post-ductal saturation differences

– post-ductal saturation is higher in TGA– all other congenital heart anomalies without

total mixing in the heart have a lower post-ductal saturation