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Non cyanotic congenital heart diseases Krzysztof Narebski Torun Problems to discuss I. Transition from fetal to newborn circulation II. Non cyanotic congenital heart diseases : • Atrial septal defect • Ventricular septal defect • Atrioventricular septal defect (A) Radiographic position of normal right heart structures. RA, right atrium; TV, tricuspid valve; RV, right ventricle; MPA, main pulmonary artery; RPA right pulmonary artery. (B) Radiographic position of normal left heart structures. LA, left atrium; MV, mitral valve; LV, left ventricle. Intracardiac pressures Estimated pressures 1st week of life (term baby): RV ~ 40 >> 30 >> 25 LV ~ 40 >> 50 >> 60 Intracardiac oxygen saturation Abbreviations • • • • • • • • • • • • CHD – FO – DA – RA, RV – LA, LV – CHF – PVR – PBF – PGE – SVR – CVP – RAAS – congenital heart disease foramen ovale ductus arteriosus right atrium, right ventricle left atrium, left ventricle congestive heart failure pulmonary vascular resistance pulmonary blood flow prostaglandin systemic vascular resistance central venous pressure renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system Maximal fetal blood oxygen saturation up to 85 % in umbilical vein Cardiac output RV 55 % LV 45 % Neonatal ECG (RV domination) Right to left shunt b/o -RA vol overload -Low placental resistance Increase oxygen blood saturation during first 10 minutes after birth up to 95 – 100 % PGE Events after birth: -PVR falls (8 weeks) -PBF increase -LA pressure exceed RA pressure -FO closure -DA closure (oxygen and lack of prostaglandin) Foramen ovale Ductus arteriosus Changes in the circulation from fetus to newborn. Atrial septal defect (ASD) ASD - types • ASD II (ostium secundum) up to 80 % • SV-ASD (sinus venosus) 10 % • ASD I (ostium primum) 10 % or AVSD Atrial septal defect (a) Ostium secundum ASD - deficiency of FO and surrounding atrial septum. (b) AVSD - deficiency of the atrioventricular septum. (c) Murmur. (d) Chest x-ray. (e,f) ECG. (g) Examples of an occlusion device used to close secundum ASD ASD Physiology : • FO closure in the first day of life • Anatomic FO closure in 2 – 3 months • FO can be opened in some circumstances in up to 20 % of adults without any symptoms Characteristic of ASD: • Up to 14 % of CHD • Most often as isolated CHD ASD – signs and symptoms • No signs if small ASD (Qp/Qs < 1.5) • If Qp/Qs > 3 : – dyspnoea, heart failure in small children (after infancy) – split second heart sound – ejection murmur in II left intercostal space radiating into the lung (pulmonary valve too small for enlarged right ventricular output) ASD - ECG • Right axis deviation with right ventricular hypertrophy – tall R in V1-3 and deep S in V4-6 • Partial right bundle branch block – RsR’ pattern in V1 ASD – chest x-ray Enlargement of : PA RA • right atrium • right ventricle (normal left atrium) • pulmonary artery Increased pulmonary flow ASD II - Echocardiography ASD I - Echocardiography ASD color doppler ASD - treatment • Small ASD : - No treatment or diuretics • Large ASD : - Percutaneous transcatheter closure (Amplatzer) - Surgery (rarely) Ventricular septal defect (VSD) VSD Characteristics : • Interventricular septum defect • Left to right shunt between ventricles • The most common (20 - 40 % congenital cardiac anomalies) • Occur in other cardiovascular associations (e.g.: TOF, CoA, pulmonary stenosis) VSD showing a left-to-right shunt. (b) Murmur. (c) Chest x-ray. (d) ECG. VSD - types Many classifications ! • A – subarterial • B – perimembranous (most common) • C – AVSD • D – muscular VSD – pathophysiology • Left to right shunt (according to pressure gradient) Addition of extra blood to normal pulmonary flow : • Increased PBF and increased pulmonary interstitial fluids up to oedema • Increased pulmonary venous return into LA • Increased LA volume, pressure & dilatation • LV hypertrophy • Finally biventricular overload & hypertrophy Decreased cardiac output >> heart failure VSD – signs and symptoms Symptoms (after neonatal period) depend on the size of defect and magnitude of the left to right shunt ! • Small VSD: mild or no symptoms, murmur ! • Moderate: excessive sweating (increased sympathetic tone - RAAS) during feeds. Fatigue with feeding, failure to thrive, frequent respiratory infections (pulmonary congestion) • Large: more severe with tachypnoea, tachycardia, hepatomegaly VSD – murmur • Harsh, holosystolic murmur loudest along the lower left sternal border • The murmur detected after PVR decreased (usually after newborn period) • Physiologic splitting of S2 usually retained VSD - ECG • !!! Voltage scale is half • Biventricular hypertrophy (left > right) VSD chest x-ray Cardiomegaly : Both left chambers (up to both ventricles) enlargement Increased PBF LA LV VSD - echo Systole Early diastole (a) medium muscular VSD (arrow). (b) color Doppler shows a left-to-right shunt (blue) during systole. (c) Also a small right-to-left shunt (red) during early diastole (LV relaxes more quickly than RV, resulting in a transient pressure gradient favoring shunting from the right to left ventricle). VSD - treatment • Small especially muscular VSD – no treatment • Amplazer or surgery as definitive treatment • PA banding in 2-stage procedure • Before surgery according to symptoms : – Supplemental oxygen – Additional calories or tube feeds – Diuretics (relieves pulmonary congestion) – Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors (reduce both systemic and pulmonary pressures) – Digoxin (increases contractility) Atrioventricular septal defect (AVSD) or Common atrioventricular canal (CAVC) or Endocardial cushion defect AVSD Characteristics : • Broad spectrum of malformations characterized by a deficiency of atrioventricular septum • Atrioventricular valves always abnormal • Clinical presentation depends on the degree of intracardiac left to right shunt, atrioventricular regurgitation and pulmonary vascular resistance • Congestive heart failure • Several method of classification AVSD - types I. II. - Partial AVSD consists of: mitral and tricuspid annuli are separated primum ASD and inlet VSD cleft of anterior mitral valve leaflet (insufficiency of valve with mitral regurgitation towards RA) more common in trisomy 21 (Down syndrome). Complete AVSD consists of: single valve annulus ASD (up to common atrium) VSD ECG superior mean axis - aVF negative (due to primary abnormality of conductive system). AVSD mitral cleft Partial AVSD (separated annuli) Complete AVSD (single valve annulus) AVSD – hemodynamic problems Heart failure and cardiomegaly in newborn period !!! • The most important is regurgitation from LV to RA via mitral cleft (shunt from the highest to the lowest pressure chamber). RA > LA. Consequence of left to right shunt and atrioventricular regurgitation is blood Intracardiac overload, which leads to biventricular hypertrophy and finally cardiac insufficiency up to pulmonary hypertension. AVSD – signs and symptoms of congestive heart failure Infant and children (severe AVSD) : • Poor feeding with inadequate weight gain • Tachypnea and labored breathing up to respiratory insufficiency • Shock like symptoms Teenagers and young adult (mild AVSD) : • Exercise intolerance • Arrhythmias AVSD – physical examination Depends of the severity of left to right shunt! • Fixed splittng of the second heart sound (S2) • Pulmonary ejection (systolic) murmur audible at the left upper sternal border • Diastolic murmur and third heart sound (S3) as a result of high flow across the tricuspid component of the atrioventricular valve AVSD – physical examination cont. • Apical murmur (blowing quality) of MR (systolic) (presence of this apical murmur + fixed S2 differentiates partial AVSD from ASD II) • Fine crepitations in severe MR (rare in infants) AVSD – chest xray AVSD - echocardiography Complete AVSD AVSD - echocardiography Common valve in complete AVSD Partial AVSD – ECG in 3 year old child aVF • aVF is negative so the axis is superior (abnormal septal depolarization) • P-wave enlargement concordant with RA, LA, or biatrial enlargement • V1 rSR' – partial RBBB AVSD - treatment • Surgery as definitive treatment in the first 6 months (closure of intra-chambers connections) • Before surgery according to symptoms : - Supplemental oxygen - Additional calories - Diuretics 40-60% - ACE inhibitors ASD – primary RV overload and hypertrophy VSD – primary LV overload and hypertrophy AVSD – primary biventricular overload and hypertrophy Thank you for your attention ECG essentials in pediatrics (hypertrophy) Right ventricular hypertrophy R in V1 S in V6 all population 0 – 7 days 8 – 30 days 1 – 3 months 3 ms – 16 years R/S in V1 0 – 3 months 3 – 6 months 6 ms – 3 years 3 – 5 years 6 – 15 years T in V1 < 12 years qR in V1 all population > 20 mm > 14 mm > 10 mm > 7 mm > 5 mm > 6.5 >4 > 2.4 > 1.6 > 0.8 positive & R/S > 1 Left ventricular hypertrophy All pediatric population : - S in V1 > 20 mm R in V6 > 20 mm T in V5 or V6 inversion Q in V5 or V6 > 4 mm (S in V2) + (R in V5) > 60 mm (Sokoloff index) Both ventricular hypertrophy Signs of right ventricular hypertrophy and : - Q in V5 or V6 T in V6 > 2 mm inversion Atrial enlargement Right atrial enlargement : - P in any leads > 3 mm (peaked shaped) Left atrial enlargement : - P in any leads (dual or biphasic shaped) P > 0.09 sec Remember Electrical axis of ECG leads Extreme axis deviation is always pathology Remember Axis deviation and QRS complex Remember P wave should be positive in I, II, aVF Newborn – normal ECG Child of 8 years – normal ECG Thank you for your attention