congenital defects Flashcards
What are the physical exam findings that are consistent with a VSD? What about the historical features?
History: may be asymptomatic if small. If larger, pt will have frequent respiratory infections, dyspnea, FTT, potential heart failure symptoms
Physical: pansystolic murmur at left lower sternal border, loud pulmonic S2 (extra flow to the right heart), systolic thrill
treatment for VSD
small defect: follow
large defect: ACE-I and diuretics to address fluid vol and vascular resistance; repair large defects before development of eisenmenger syndrome
What are the physical exam findings of an ASD? History findings?
History: might be asymtomatic. large defects can cause cyanosis, heart failure, dyspnea, fatigue, FTT
Physical: strong impulse at lower left sternal border, wide fixed split S2, systolic ejection murmur at upper left sternal border
What is the treatment for an ASD?
small defects- no repair but do need abx prophylaxis before surgery or dental work. most less than 7 mm close on their own
close surgically for symptomatic infants or when pulm blood flow is 2X that of systemic blood flow
what are risk factors for PDA
-prematurity (most significant), high altituide, maternal rubella, maternal prostaglandin administration; females > males
What are the s/sx of PDA?
may be asymptomatic. this is a left to right shunt. may have sx of heart failure, dyspnea, wide pulse pressure, machine murmur at second left intercostal space, loud S2, bounding pulses
transposition of the great vessels: describe the physiology
2 separate circuits: aorta connected to right heart and pulmonary circulation connected to the left heart. this is a shunt dependent lesion- without at PDA or VSD, it is incompatible with life
What are the main risk factors for transposition of the great vessels?
-Apert syndrome (FGF2 mutation that leads to craniosynestosis and syndactyly), trisomy 21, 13, 18, cri-du-chat syndrome (maternal diabetes?)
H/P for transposition of the great vessels
cyanosis after birth that worsens after PDA closure, loud S2
How is transposition of the great vessels treated?
-keep PDA open, balloon atrial septostomy to widen VSD, surgery
what is the clinical presentation for persistent truncus arteriosus?
cyanosis, dyspnea, fatigue, FTT, fast development of heart failure. loud S1 and S2, bounding pulses. may see boot shaped heart, no pulmonary artery, large aorta arching to right side
endocardial cushion defect
malformation of AV valves, atrial septum, and/or ventricular septum causes valvular and septal defects
complete vs incomplete endocardial cushion defect
- complete defect: ASD, VSD, and single AV canal
- incomplete defect: ASD and minor AV valve abnormalities
Major risk factor for endocardial cushion defect
Trisomy 21 (20% of pts)
tetrology of fallot risk factors; presentation
trisomy 21, 13,18, cri du chat
presentation: early cyanosis, dyspnea, fatigue, kids squat for relief during hypoxemic episodes, systolic ejection murmur at left sternal border, RV lift, single S2