Congenital Heart Defects Flashcards

1
Q

Tetralogy of Fallot

cyanotic

A

When affected babies cry or have a bowel movement, they may develop a “tet spell” where they turn very blue, have difficulty breathing, become limp, and occasionally lose consciousness. Other symptoms may include a heart murmur, finger clubbing, and easy tiring upon breastfeeding.
Squatting!

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2
Q

Tetralogy of Fallot: Risk Factors

cyanotic

A

A mother who uses alcohol, has diabetes, is over the age of 40, or gets rubella during pregnancy. It may also be associated with Down syndrome.

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3
Q

Tetralogy of Fallot

cyanotic

A

4 defects:

pulmonary stenosis, narrowing of the exit from the right ventricle
VSD
RVH
an overriding aorta, which allows blood from both ventricles to enter the aorta

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4
Q

Tetralogy of Fallot: Treatment

A

surgically in 1st yr:

increasing the size of the pulmonary valve and pulmonary arteries and repairing VSD

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5
Q

Tetralogy of Fallot: Tet Spell

A

squatting: increases systemic vascular resistance and allows for a temporary reversal of the shunt. It increases pressure on the left side of the heart, decreasing the right to left shunt thus decreasing the amount of deoxygenated blood entering the systemic circulation

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6
Q

Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS)

cyanotic

A

left side of the heart is severely underdeveloped. It may affect the left ventricle, aorta, aortic valve, or mitral valve.
ECG: RAD, RVH, but not indicative of HLHS

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7
Q

HLHS: Treatment

cyanotic

A

staged reconstructive surgery (Norwood or Sano procedure within a few days of birth, Glenn or Hemi-Fontan procedure at 3 to 6 months of age, and the Fontan procedure at 1 1/2 to 5 years of age) or cardiac transplantation.
remember: RV does the work

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8
Q

Transposition of the Great Arteries

cyanotic

A

Pulmonary artery + aorta are swapped
two separate “parallel” circulatory systems are created
ECG: RVH, RAD, not specific

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9
Q

Transposition of the Great Arteries

cyanotic

A

Symptoms:

Fast breathing (tachypnea)
Difficulty breathing (dyspnea)
tachycardia
Poor feeding

VSD, ASD, patent ductus arteriosus may also be present

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10
Q

Truncus Arteriosus

cyanotic

A

truncus arteriosus fails to properly divide into the pulmonary trunk and aorta. This results in one arterial trunk arising from the heart and providing mixed blood to the coronary arteries, pulmonary arteries, and systemic circulation

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11
Q

Truncus Arteriosus

cyanotic

A

single artery arising from the two ventricles which gives rise to both the aortic and pulmonary vessels
abnormal truncal valve
right sided aortic arch in about 30% of cases (not shown)
large ventricular septal defect
pulmonary hypertension
complete mixing occurring at level of the great vessel
right-to-left shunting of blood

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12
Q

Truncus Arteriosus

cyanotic

A
Cyanosis presents at birth
Heart failure may occur within weeks
Systolic ejection murmur is heard at the left sternal border
Widened pulse pressure
Bounding arterial pulses
Loud second heart sound
Biventricular hypertrophy
Cardiomegaly
Increased pulmonary vascularity
Hypocalcemia (if associated with DiGeorge syndrome)
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13
Q

Tricuspid Atresia

cyanotic

A

complete absence of the tricuspid valve. Therefore, there is an absence of right atrioventricular connection.[2] This leads to a hypoplastic or absent RV.
must have ASD, VSD present

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14
Q

Coarctation of the Aorta (acyanotic)

A

the aorta is narrow, usually in the area where the ductus arteriosus (ligamentum arteriosum after regression) inserts
Coarctations are most common in the aortic arch.
Other defects may be present, typically on left side of heart

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15
Q

Eisenmenger’s Syndrome

A

the process in which a long-standing left-to-right cardiac shunt caused by a congenital heart defect (typically by a VSD, ASD, or less commonly, patent ductus arteriosus) causes pulmonary hypertension and eventual reversal of the shunt into a cyanotic right-to-left shunt.

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16
Q

VSD

acyanotic

A

The membranous portion, which is close to the atrioventricular node, are more common than muscular ventricular septal defects, and are the most common congenital cardiac anomaly.

17
Q

Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return (TAPVR)

cyanotic

A

all four pulmonary veins are malpositioned and make anomalous connections to the systemic venous circulation.
A patent foramen ovale, patent ductus arteriosus or an atrial septal defect must be present, or else the condition is fatal due to a lack of systemic blood flow