Congenital heart disease 3 Flashcards

1
Q

The patient scheduled for a Fontan procedure MOST likely has a diagnosis of:
a. truncus arteriosus
b. Ebstein’s anomaly
c. transposition of the great arteries
d. hypoplastic left heart syndrome

A

d. hypoplastic left heart syndrome

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2
Q

Ebstein’s anomaly is characterized by

A

a downward displacement of the tricuspid valve
right atrial dilation
“atrialization” of the right ventricle
usually an ASD or PFO

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3
Q

In transposition of the great arteries, each great vessel arises from

A

the wrong ventricle

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4
Q

Transposition of the great arteries produces a circulation in

A

parallel rather than in series

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5
Q

_____________ is a medical emergency.

A

Transposition of the great arteries

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6
Q

With transposition of the great arteries, the RV gives rise to

A

the aorta (poorly-oxygenated circuit)

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7
Q

With transposition of the great arteries, the LV gives rise to

A

the pulmonary artery (well-oxygenated circuit)

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8
Q

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome is a

A

single-ventricle lesion

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9
Q

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome is corrected with

A

staged surgical procedures culminating with the Fontan operation

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10
Q

With hypoplastic left heart syndrome, __________ should be avoided

A

anything that increases PVR

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11
Q

With hypoplastic left heart syndrome, the patient has

A

a single left ventricle that pumps blood into the systemic circulation

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12
Q

Truncus arteriosus is characterized by

A

a single artery that gives rise to the pulmonary, systemic, and coronary circulations

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13
Q

Truncus arteriosus typically also comes with

A

a VSD

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14
Q

With truncus arteriosus, there is only one artery which means

A

there is no specific pathway for blood to enter the pulmonary circulation before being pumped into the systemic circulation

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15
Q

The most common congenital defect of the tricuspid valve is

A

Ebstein’s anomaly

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16
Q

With Ebstein’s anomaly, ______________- can be severe

A

tricuspid regurgitation

17
Q

Describe the onset of IV drugs with Ebstein’s anomaly.

A

may be prolonged due to the pooling of drugs in the enlarged RA

18
Q

__________ is common in the postoperative period with Ebstein’s anomaly

A

RV failure

19
Q

Maintenance of _______________ is critical with Ebstein’s anomaly

A

RV function (risk of CHF)

20
Q

Transposition of the great arteries relies on ______________ to be compatable with life

A

ASD, VSD, or PFO until surgery performed

21
Q

Treatments for transposition of the great arteries includes:

A

keep PDA open with prostaglandin infusion
Rashkind procedure- interarterial pathway to allow some oxygenated blood to reach systemic circ.
Intraatrial baffle and arterial switch procedures- definitive surgical correction

22
Q

Anatomic features of hypoplastic left heart syndrome include

A

hypoplastic LV
hypoplastic aortic arch
mitral and aortic stenosis or atresia
ductal-dependent circulation

23
Q

The goal of surgical correction with hypoplastic left heart syndrome is

A

separating the pulmonary and systemic circulations

24
Q

What are the three surgeries needed to correct a hypoplastic left heart?

A

Norwood stage 1
Norwood stage 2
Norwood stage 3 (Fontan procedure)

25
Q

When does Norwood stage 1 occur?

A

neonatal period

26
Q

Surgical goals of Norwood stage 1 include

A

aortic reconstruction- aortic arch now arises from the pulmonary trunk
pulmonary arteries disconnected and use to create shunt from subclavian artery or right ventricle

27
Q

When does Norwood stage 2 occur?

A

3-6 months of age

28
Q

Surgical goals of Norwood stage 2 include

A

the shunt from the first procedure is taken down and new connection is made between the SVC and pulmonary arteries

29
Q

When does Norwood stage 3 occur?

A

2-4 years

30
Q

What is the surgical goal of Norwood stage 3?

A

conversion to Fontan circulation- the IVC is connected to the pulmonary artery with a conduit

31
Q

Important anesthetic considerations after the Fontan procedure:

A

patient has a single ventricle the pumps blood into the systemic circulation
pulmonary blood flow is passive from SVC/IVC
increased PVR is detrimental to pulmonary blood flow
PPV reduces blood flow and spontaneous ventilation is preferred
patients are preload dependent!