Congenital heart disease 3 Flashcards
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
d. hypoplastic left heart syndrome
Ebstein’s anomaly is characterized by
a downward displacement of the tricuspid valve
right atrial dilation
“atrialization” of the right ventricle
usually an ASD or PFO
In transposition of the great arteries, each great vessel arises from
the wrong ventricle
Transposition of the great arteries produces a circulation in
parallel rather than in series
_____________ is a medical emergency.
Transposition of the great arteries
With transposition of the great arteries, the RV gives rise to
the aorta (poorly-oxygenated circuit)
With transposition of the great arteries, the LV gives rise to
the pulmonary artery (well-oxygenated circuit)
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome is a
single-ventricle lesion
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome is corrected with
staged surgical procedures culminating with the Fontan operation
With hypoplastic left heart syndrome, __________ should be avoided
anything that increases PVR
With hypoplastic left heart syndrome, the patient has
a single left ventricle that pumps blood into the systemic circulation
Truncus arteriosus is characterized by
a single artery that gives rise to the pulmonary, systemic, and coronary circulations
Truncus arteriosus typically also comes with
a VSD
With truncus arteriosus, there is only one artery which means
there is no specific pathway for blood to enter the pulmonary circulation before being pumped into the systemic circulation
The most common congenital defect of the tricuspid valve is
Ebstein’s anomaly