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FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
MORPHOLOGICAL DETERMINANTS
VI TRAN
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
EuroEcho, Budapest, 7th December 2011
DECLARATION OF CONFLICT OF INTEREST: I have nothing to declare
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
What is the functionally single ventricle?
The heart that is incapable of supporting both the
pulmonary and systemic circulations
Why should this be?
Only one ventricle within ventricular mass
Two ventricles, but one is incapable of
supporting the entirety of either the systemic
or the pulmonary circulation
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Ventricles unable to support circulations
Normally formed, but too small
Hypoplastic and rudimentary
Obstructions to flows through inlet or outlet
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Anatomic substrates
Tricuspid atresia
Double inlet left ventricle
Hypoplastic left heart
Pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular
septum
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Understanding and describing the anatomy
Analysis of atrioventricular junctions
Do atrial chambers connect to both ventricles
or to only one?
Description of ventricular morphology
What is the morphologic nature of the
pumping ventricle, and is there a second
ventricle?
Describe arrangement in logical fashion
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Logical analysis
Analyse ventricles in tripartite fashion
Use the “Morphological method”
Van Praagh et al, 1980
Use most constant feature of any structure for
definition
Do not define any structure that is itself
variable on the basis of another variable
feature
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Morphologically Right Ventricle
Outlet
Inlet
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Apical
trabecular
component
Morphologically Left Ventricle
Outlet
Apical
trabecular
component
Inlet
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Tripartite ventricular description
Normal ventricles each have three parts
Morphology determined by apical component
Abnormal ventricles have inlets and outlet
components shared between apical parts
One ventricle is dominant
Other ventricle is rudimentary & incomplete
Rudimentary RV is always antero-superior
Rudimentary LV is always postero-inferior
Hearts with one big and one small ventricle are
functionally univentricular
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Double Inlet Left Ventricle
Dominant Left Ventricle
Rudimentary Right Ventricle
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
“Classical” Tricuspid Atresia
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Are these entities single ventricles?
Both have one big and one small chamber
Big chamber is morphologically left
ventricle
Small chamber is the incomplete and
hypoplastic morphologically right
ventricle
“Univentricular” only if we deny
ventricular status to small chamber!
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Logical description
Tricuspid atresia & DILV both have big left
ventricle and small, incomplete, RV
Neither is an example of “univentricular heart”
or “single ventricle”
We were wrong, in the past, to deny ventricular
status to small RV
It is the ATRIOVENTRICULAR CONNECTION
which is truly univentricular!
Hole between chambers is VSD
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
UNIVENTRICULAR AV CONNECTION
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Double Inlet Right Ventricle
Dominant Right Ventricle
Rudimentary Left Ventricle
Rudimentary LV rarely can be right-sided
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Double Inlet Solitary Ventricle
Solitary and Indeterminate Ventricle
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Hearts with Biventricular AV Connection
can also be functionally univentricular!
Unbalanced atrioventricular septal defect
Imperforate atrioventricular valve
Hypoplastic left heart
Hypoplastic right heart (pulmonary atresia
with intact ventricular septum)
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Unbalanced AV Septal Defect
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Imperforate Tricuspid Valve
Biventricular AV connections
Right
atrium
Left
atrium
Hypoplastic
RV
Left
ventricle
Functionally Univentricular Heart
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Hypoplastic left heart
Mitral atresia or stenosis
Aortic atresia or stenosis
Left ventricle not capable of supporting
systemic circulation
Irrespective of morphology, all examples are
functionally univentricular
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Hypoplastic left heart
Univentricular AV Connection
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Hypoplastic Left Heart
Biventricular AV Connections
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Pulmonary atresia with intact vent. septum
Spectrum of malformation
Overgrowth of RV cavity
All ventricles have three components
Cavity can be tripartite, bipartite, or unipartite
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Pulmonary Atresia with Intact VS
Minimal overgrowth of apical component
Functionally biventricular
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Pulmonary Atresia with Intact VS
Bipartite, suitable for 1 ½ ventricle repair?
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
Pulmonary Atresia with Intact VS
Functionally univentricular
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE VENTRICLE
Conclusions
Many hearts can be functionally univentricular
Anatomically univentricular hearts are exceedingly
rare
Functionally single ventricles can have
biventricular or univentricular AV connections
Analyse separately ventricular morphology and AV
junctional morphology
Tripartite approach to ventricular morphology
Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL, London
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