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Congenital Heart Lesions. Outline. Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions Right side obstruction and R -> L shunt Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy. Ductus Arteriosus. Aorta. Pulmonary Artery. Left Atrium. P atent F oramen
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Outline Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions • Right side obstruction and R -> L shunt • Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy
Ductus Arteriosus Aorta Pulmonary Artery Left Atrium Patent Foramen Ovale Right Atrium LeftVentricle Right Ventricle
Key Points • Blood flows to the path of least resistance • Pulmonary resistance < systemic resistance • All newborns have connections • PDA • PFO
Outline Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions • Right side obstruction and R -> L shunt • Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy
Left to right shunting • Right and left side connected • Increased (too much) pulmonary blood flow • Respiratory distress/ CHF
Left to right shunt lesions • Ventricular septal defect (VSD) • Atrial septal defect (ASD) • AV canal • Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)
Diagnostic tools • CXR-- “wet lungs” with cardiomegaly • EKG-- may have RVH, IRBBB (ASD), abnormal “NW” axis (AV canal), BVH (VSD) • ABG-- high CO2 late finding; PO2 in 100% not very useful; no acidosis
Outline Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions • Right side obstruction and R -> L shunt • Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy
Left side obstruction • Not enough blood to the body • Hypo-perfusion, acidosis, shock • +/- connection between right and left
Left side obstructive lesions • Mitral valve obstruction • Aortic valve obstruction • Coarctation of the aorta • Everything obstructed • Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
Diagnostic tools • CXR- may be normal or “wet” • EKG- often misleading; neonate will not have LVH you would expect from an older person with AS or coarct (and hypoplast will have left forces) • ABG- may present with profound metabolic acidosis, low CO2 (hyperventilating), PO2 may be lo or hi
Outline Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions • Right side obstruction & R -> L shunt • Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy
Cyanotic lesions • Connection - right and left sides • AND right side obstruction • Decreased pulmonary blood flow OR • Separated systems • Normal or increased pulmonary blood flow
Cyanotic lesions • Right side obstructions • Tricuspid obstruction • Pulmonary obstruction • Tetralogy of Fallot • Separate systems • Transposition of the great vessels
Diagnostic tools • CXR- classically, “black lung fields” with “boot” (TOF) or narrow mediastinum (TGA) • EKG- very often normal, except tricuspid atresia classically “northeast” • ABG- these are the kids who fail the hyperoxia challenge
Outline Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions • Right side obstruction & R -> L shunt • Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy
Mixing lesions • Very large connection • Key points- • What goes into the lungs comes out of the lungs = red • What goes into the body comes out of the body = blue • May have right side obstruction
Mixing Lesions • Single ventricle • Double inlet left ventricle (DILV) • Double outlet right ventricle (DORV) • Primitive ventricle • Hypoplastic right or left ventricle • Total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR) • Truncus arteriosus
Outline Normal anatomy L -> R shunt Left side obstruction Cyanotic heart lesions • Right side obstruction & R -> L shunt • Transposition Mixing Lesions Surgical therapy
Surgical therapy • Repair vs. palliation • Palliating a single ventricle - Example: HLHS • Stage I: Norwood and BT shunt • Stage II: Glenn shunt • Stage III: Fontan
Take-home • Congenital heart disease is not about murmurs • Tachypnea, cyanosis, “shock” should all raise red flags • Exam, CXR,EKG,Sats, ABG are as important as the echo!