Congenital Heart Disease Flashcards

1
Q

List 3 Acyanotic Cardiac Lesions.

A
  • Ventricular Septal Defects (VSD)
  • Atrial septal defects (ASD)
  • Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)
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2
Q

List 2 features of acyanotic cardiac lesions.

A
  1. Left to right shunting
    (mixing of oxygenated blood with deoxygenated blood)
  2. Increased pulmonary blood flow
    (risk of pulmonary hypertension. Untreated acyanotic heart disease can lead to Eisenmenger syndrome)
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3
Q

Which type of murmur is heard in acyanotic cardiac disease if the lesion is above the level of the nipple?

A

Ejection systolic murmur.

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4
Q

Which type of murmur is heard in acyanotic cardiac disease if the lesion is below the level of the nipple?

A

Pan-systolic murmurs.

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5
Q

What syndrome can untreated acyanotic heart disease lead to?

A

Eisenmenger Syndrome

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6
Q

A child has a small ventricular septal defect. What symptoms might they have?

A
  • May be asymptomatic

- Normal growth.

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7
Q

A child has a moderate ventricular septal defect. What symptoms might they have?

A
  • Poor feeding
  • Failure to thrive
  • Short of Breath
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8
Q

A child has a large ventricular septal defect. What symptoms might they have?

A
  • Poor feeding
  • Failure to thrive (falls below centiles)
  • SOB
  • Sweaty and pale with feeds
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9
Q

Describe the Epidemiology of Ventricular Septal Defects.

A
  • Most common congenital heart lesion (15-20%)

- Associated with Down’s syndrome

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10
Q

A child has a ventricular septal defect. When are they likely to present?

A
  • Antenatal diagnosis at 16 - 18 weeks

- Presentation at 6 - 8 weeks

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11
Q

A child has congestive heart failure as a result of a congenital ventricular septal defect. When is this likely to present?

A

Typically presents after 4 - 6 weeks.

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12
Q

A child has a ventricular septal defect that is not identified or treated. What condition might this lead to and when will the condition establish itself?

A
  • Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN)

- May become established by 6 - 12 months

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13
Q

How would you manage a small ventricular septal defect?

A

If less than 5mm, defect may close spontaneously, with no repair required.

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14
Q

How would you manage a moderate ventricular septal defect?

A
  • Diuretic therapy (Furosemide + Spironolactone)

- Feeding with high caloric feeds (Infantrini)

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15
Q

How would you manage a large ventricular septal defect/

A
  • Diuretic + Feeding with high caloric feeds
  • Optimise weight gain for surgery
  • Schedule surgery before 12 months to prevent PPHN (Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn).
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16
Q

Describe the symptoms seen in a child with an Atrial Septal Defect

A
  • Typically asymptomatic

- Some children will have recurrent chest infections.

17
Q

Describe the epidemiology of ASD (Atrial Septal Defect).

A
  • Second most common acyanotic heart lesion (5-10%).
18
Q

At what age would a child present with an atrial septal defect?

A

Mean age of diagnosis is 4.5s from an incidental finding of murmur.

19
Q

When would a symptomatic person present with an Atrial Septal Defect?

A

Symptomatic presentation is usually before age of 40yrs with arrhythmias and dyspnoea

20
Q

Describe the clinical features seen in Atrial Septal Defects.

A
  • May have no auscultatory findings in infants (asymptomatic).
21
Q

What might you hear on auscultation of a Atrial Septal Defect?

A
  • Ejection systolic murmur heard loudest at the upper-left sternal border