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Congenital Heart Disease with Left to Right Shunt. Michael Pieters Dept. of Diagnostic Radiology Bloemfontein. Overview. Classification of congenital heart lesions Factors that influence lesion presentation Imaging chain sequence Left to right Shunt lesions Anatomy Physiology Imaging.
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Congenital Heart Disease with Left to Right Shunt Michael Pieters Dept. of Diagnostic Radiology Bloemfontein
Overview • Classification of congenital heart lesions • Factors that influence lesion presentation • Imaging chain sequence • Left to right Shunt lesions • Anatomy • Physiology • Imaging
Classification of Congenital Cardiac Lesions • Shunt lesions • Right heart lesions • Left heart lesions • Abnormal origin of the great arteries
Factors that influence lesion presentation • Age of child • Severity of the lesion • Example – VSD • R to L shunt at birth • L to R shunt with CCF as age increases • The anatomy of the lesion remains constant • Radiographic features and clinical findings change with time • Classic radiographic features of certain lesions – rarely seen
Imaging chain sequence • The imaging sequence varies with • Age • Clinical presentation • Type of lesion • Echocardiography • Chest Radiography • CT • MRI • Angiography
Congenital Cardiac Left to Right Shunt Lesions • ASD • VSD • PDA • DuctusArteriosus Aneurysm • Aortico-Pulmonary Window
Cardiomegaly • Cardiomegaly on CXR • Asses pulmonary vascularity - ? Increased • Read history - ? Acyanotic patient • Ddx: • ASD • AVSD • VSD • PDA • Aortico-pulmonary window
ASD • 10% of all CHD • Incidence - twice as common in females • Secundum defects – likely genetic cause • Holt Oram • Familial ASD
ASD Anatomy • 3 Primary types • Relationship to the fossa ovalis • Secundum defects (80%) • Region of fossa ovalis • OstiumPrimum defects (10%) • Caudal to the fossa ovalis • Sinus Venosus defects (10%) • Posterior to the fossa ovalis
ASD – sinus venosus defects • Not true ASD’s • Defect in the septum which separates the • sinus venosus portion of the RA from the • right pulmonary veins and systemic veins • Most often found in the wall between the • Posterior inferior border of SVC and • RA • Commonly assosciated with anomalous connection of • Right upper, middle or lower pulmonary veins draining to the • RA or SVC
ASD – sinus venosus defects • Much less commonly - defect is found in the wall between the • Inferior RA at its junction with the • IVC • Assosciated with anomalous connection of • Right middle or lower pulmonary veins • draining to the RA or SVC
ASD – Coronary sinus septal defects • Rare spectrum of lesions • Partial or complete absence of wall between • Coronary sinus and LA • Associated with a left SVC draining to the coronary sinus • Blood shunts from the LA to the RA via “unroofed” coronary sinus
ASD – Patent Foramen Ovale • Foramen Ovale • Located between septum secundum and primum • Normally patent prenatally • Allows O2 rich blood fromductusvenosus-> reach LA • Sealed after birth • Increased LA pressure vs RA • Probe patency • 25% of adults • Functionally closed • Right to left shunt possible - Valsalva
ASD – Common atrium • Atrial septum completely absent • Common in visceral heterotaxy syndromes
ASD - Physiology • Left to right shunt volume determined by • ASD size • Left heart compliance • Pulmonary vascular resistance • Large defects show increased size of • RA • RV • Pulmonary artery • Right to left shunt will occur when • Pulmonary vascular resistance > Systemic vascular resistance
ASD – clinical presentaton • Detected 1-2 yr of age • May present earlier @ 6-8 weeks with murmur • Older children with large ASD • Fatigue and dyspnoea • Split second heart sound – no variation with respiration • Diastolic flow murmur • Adults – flow related pulmonary arterial hypertension
ASD Imaging - Echocardiography • Modality of choice for Dx • Localising • Size • Shunt direction and severity (Colour Doppler) • Right ventricular qualitative function • Septal bowing (Rt to Lt) • Points to volume overload
ASD Imaging - Echocardiography • Right ventricular pressure • Assessed by evaluating the degree of: • Tricuspid regurgitation • Septal systolic position (systolic septal flattening – increased RV pressure) • PFO • Dx – flap valve or • Saline injection to right heart + Valsalva • Rt to Lt shunt on Valsalva • TEE
ASD Imaging – Chest radiography • Neonate • Normal cardiac size • Normal pulmonary flow • Later infancy and childhood • Mild cardiomegaly • Triangular cardiac silhouette • Left atrium normal • distinguishes uncomplicated ASDfrom other L->R lesions) • Main pulmonary artery enlarged • Eisenmengersyndrome findings • Seen in pulmonary hypertension • Large central pulmonary arteries • Peripheral pulmonary artery tapering
ASD Imaging – Chest radiography • Mild to moderate cardiomegaly • Increased pulmonary vascularity • No left atrial dilatation
ASD – Imaging • Angiography • Asses haemodynamic consequences of ASD or • Used if transcatheter closure is planned • MRI • Adjunct to echo • >90% sensitive and specific for ASD localization and detection • Useful in pt with poor acoustic windows • Can lead to ASD being misdiagnosed • atrial septum is thin on BW images – rather use MRI cine • GE and steady state free precession cine – shows turbulent jet over ASD • Cine phase contrast sequences • Show direction and amount of shunting
ASD – MRI Dynamic perfusion study • PFO can be demonstated by injecting Gadolinium into the right heart + Valsalva • ASD haemodynamic evaluation • Demonstrates Eisenmenger syndrome physiology • Contrast seen crossing the atrial septum from the RA to the LA
AVSD • 2-5% of all CHD • 40% of Down’s syndrome patients have CHD • 40% of Down’s pt with CHD have AVSD • Associated with visceral heterotaxia / asplenia and polysplenia syndromes • Ellis van Creveld syndrome
AVSD • Lesions associated with AVSD • PDA (10%) • Tetralogy of Fallot (6%) • Transposition of the great arteries • Double outlet RV • Aortic coarctation
AVSD - Anatomy • Abnormal development of the endocardial cushions • Mild form - partial AVSD: • Crescent shaped defect in the inferior portion of the atrial septum adjacent to the AV – valves • Cleft mitral valve • Separate mitral and tricuspid valve orifices
AVSD - Anatomy • Complete form: • Single AV-valve • Ostiumprimum ASD just superior to the plane of the AV – valve • Large VSD beneath the plane of the AV - valve • Cleft in the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve • Cleft in septal leaflet of tricuspid valve • The common AV-valve has 5 leaflets • Shortened left ventricle inlet • Left ventricle papillary muscle defects • abnormally close to each other or • only one papillary muscle • Unbalanced AVSD • Relative hypoplasia of one of the ventricles
AVSD - physiology • Complete AVSD • Left to right shunt - related to size of defect and pulmonary vascular resistance • Shunting may be interatrial or interventricular • Cleft Mitral Valve leads to mitral regurgitation and CCF • Pulmonary hypertension develops (more common in Down’s pts)
AVSD presentation • Infants with complete AVSD • Tachypnoea, tachycardia • CCF sx when pulmonary resistance starts to fall • Signs and symptoms vary according to the degree of shunting • Partial AVSD • Infants usually asymptomatic • Can present earlier if severe mitral incompetence
AVSD - Imaging • Echocardiography • Accurately demonstrates AVSD components • Ostiumprimum defect • Inlet portion of the ventricle • Abnormal valve leaflet morphology • Papillary muscle architechture • Shunt level and flow direction • Ventricular function and size • Evaluate for outflow tract obstruction • Pulmonary and systemic venous anatomy (must be documented because of frequency of associated heterotaxy abnormalities)
AVSD - Imaging • Chest Radiography • Moderate to marked cardiomegaly • RV and RA enlargement (more in complete AVSD) • Increased pulmonary vascularity • Left atrial enlargement – if associated mitral incompetence • Lung infiltrates (increased pulmonary blood flow associated with recurrent LRTI) • Lung hyperinflation – seen with large left to right shunts • due to increased blood volume with increased overall lung volume as well as increased airway resistance from enlarged arteries and veins
AVSD - Imaging • Chest Radiography • Cardiomegaly • Pulmonary plethora
AVSD - imaging • Cross sectional imaging • Not needed in initial Dx • Used to confirm Dx and • evaluate the size and morphology of the atria, leaflets, ventricles and great vessels • Evaluate ventricular function • Cine phase contrast MRI • Assessment of shunt fraction (Qp/Qs) • Valvular function
AVSD - Imaging • Angiocardiography • Rarely necessary for Dx • Used if Dx is unclear or haemodynamic information is needed • Long axis ventriculogram • Goose neck deformity of left ventricular outflow tract • Anterior superiorly positioned aortic valve • Elongated and narrowed LV outflow tract
VSD • 20% of all CHD • 2/1000 Live briths • VSD + complex CHD account for > 50% of CHD • Most common lesion in trisomy 13,18 and 21 • Incidence slightly higher in females • Incidence varies on age of evaluation • Most small VSDs close spontaneously
VSD • Isolated or • as part of complex CHD • Tetralogy of Fallot • Truncusarteriosus • ASD • Coarctation of the aorta • Tricuspid atresia • Transposition of the great arteries • Double outlet RV
VSD - Anatomy • 4 Components of the ventricular septum • Inlet septum • Muscular septum • Outlet septum • Membranous septum • VSD involves one or more component
VSD - Anatomy • Inlet septum • Contains AV valves and their attachments • Formed from endocardial cushions • AVSD defect location • Muscular septum • Trabeculated portion of RV (viewed from RV) • From tricuspid valve leaflets to RV apex and crista supraventricularis • Location of single or multiple muscular defects • Outlet septum • Extends from the crista supraventricularis to pulmonary valve (viewed from RV) • Membranous septum • Inferior to the right and non-coronary cusps of the aortic valve • 80% of VSDs involve this area
VSD - Physiology • Physiologic effect determined by • VSD size • Rt and Lt heart compiance • Pulmonary vascular resistance • Small defects • High flow resistance • Large defects • Low flow resistance • High blood flow in the pulmonary vasculature • Leads to pulmonary vascular obstructive disease
VSD - Symptoms • Symptoms dictated by • VSD size • Degree of Left to Right shunt • Typical signs in > 1 month of age • PSM as pulmonary resistance falls • No murmur in large VSD • Loud split 2nd heart sound • Significant shunt • Failure to thrive • Dyspnoea • CCF • Irreversablepulmonary vascular obstructive disease • Shunt reversal
VSD - Imaging • Echocardiography • Method of choice • Used to asses the location, number and size of VSDs • Shunt assessment • Colour Doppler is useful to identify muscular VSDs • RV + Pulmonary artery pressures measured • Rt + Lt heart volumes are measured • Tricuspid and Aortic valves • Assessed for possible tethering of the valve tissue into the defect borders • TEE used if poor acoustic windows
VSD - Imaging • Chest Radiography • Findings depend on VSD size • Small VSD – may have normal CXR • Moderate to large VSD • Cardiomegaly with LA, LV, RV enlargement • Enlarged pulmonary arteries • Increased pulmonary blood flow • CCF frequent in infants + large defects • Older children – pulmonary hypertension likely • Large central pulmonary arteries • Pruned peripheral pulmonary arterial branches
VSD – Cross sectional imaging • Echocardiography usually sufficient • Muscular VSDs sometimes detected on routine CT Chest • MRI • 90% accuracy in VSD detection • Larger defects seen with • Spin Echo or • Double inversion recovery techniques • Smaller defects seen with • GE or • Steady state free precession images
VSD – Cross sectional imaging • MRI • Shunt evaluation • Cine phase contrast measurements in aorta and pulmonary artery • Rt + Lt Ventricular stroke volume comparison • Quantative assessment • Rt and Lt ventricular function • Rt and Lt ventricular volumes • Ejection fractions • Evaluation for extracardiac vascular anomalies
VSD - Imaging • Angiocardiography • Used to • Assess pulmonary vascular resistance • Quantify intracardiac shunting • Evaluate for ventricular septal defect anatomy • Evaluate the coronary arteries • Evaluate for associated valvular and vascular anomalies • Angiocardiography used if echocardiographic evaluation was insufficient or if transcatheter VSD closure is planned
PDA • 5-10% of CHD • 1/1600 live births • Twice as common in females • 20-30% of prems have PDA • Often associated with • VSD • Aortic coarctation • Aortic stenosis • Mitral regurgitation
PDA - Anatomy • Persistence of embryologic 6th aortic arch • 6th Aortic arch connects Lt pulmonary artery with descending aorta • PDA may be on the right with a Rt arch
PDA - Anatomy • DuctusArteriosus / Aorta angle • Acute angle seen in isolated PDA with pulmonary atresia • Ductal dependant pulmonary flow • Obtuse angle seen in Non-ductal dependant pulmonary flow
PDA –prostaglandins and O2 • PG keep the duct patent during foetal life • At birth blood [O2] rises and [PG] lowers • Functional ductal constriction • Complete closure @ 2 months • Ligamentumarteriosum remains (may calcify) • In Premature infants closure is delayed due to • Less sensitive ductal tissue to [O2] • Respiratory distress – hypoxia -> increased [PG] • In full term infants • Rubella • Asphyxia • Genetic and environmental causes
PDA - Physiology • Amount of Lt to Rt shunt dictated by • Ductal length and diameter • Degree of pulmonary hypertension • Untreated PDA leads to Pulmonary vascular obstructive disease • Prem with no significant lung disease • Systolic high frequency murmur • CCF (large shunt) • Prem with significant lung disease • PDA prevalence > 80% • Almost inaudablemurmer • Dx with echocardiography
PDA - Physiology • Term infant with small PDA • Usually asymptomatic • Murmur present • Infant with moderate to large PDA • Continuous machinary like murmur • FTT • Poor feeding • CCF • Irritability