Cardio Developmental Defects Flashcards

1
Q

what kind of shunt is more common

A

L to R shunt

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2
Q

when do L to R shunts cause cyanosis

A

later–> “blue kids”

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3
Q

What is the most common congenital cardiac anomaly

A

VSD

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4
Q

3 L to R shunts

A
  1. VSD
  2. ASD
  3. PDA (patent ductus arteriousus)
    * this is the order of prevalence
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5
Q

loud S1; wide, fixed split S2

A

ASD

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6
Q

continous machine-like murmur

A

PDA

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7
Q

MCC of early cyanosis

A

Tetralogy of Fallot

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8
Q

5 R to L shunts (early cyanosis)

A
  1. Persistant Truncus arteriosus
  2. Transposition of great vessels
  3. Tricuspid atresia
  4. Tetralogy of Fallot
  5. Total anomalous venous return
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9
Q

defect in persistant truncus arteriosus

A

failure of TA to divide into pulmonary trunk and aorta–> only one vessel of outflow for the heart and complete mixing of oxy and non-oxy blood

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10
Q

2 physical exam findings in persistent truncus arteriosus

A
  1. loud S2
  2. systolic ejection murmur at left sternal border
    * also bounding arterial pulses (increased volume); biventricular hypetrophy also possible–> boot shaped heart maybe
    * most pts have accompanying VSD
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11
Q

defect in tricuspid atresia

A

absence of tricuspid valve and hypoplastic RV

*need both a VSD and ASD for viability

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12
Q

why does transposition of great vessels produce profound cyanosis

A

there are two closed, independent loops

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13
Q

tx for transposition of g.v.?

A

prostaglandins to keep ductus arteriosus patent–> needs a shunt to mix some of the blood

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14
Q

defect in total anomalous venous return

A

pulmonary veins drain into right heart circulation (SVC, coronary sinus, etc)

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15
Q

4 defects in tetralogy of Fallot

A
  1. pulmonic stenosis
  2. right ventricular hypertrophy (boot-shaped heart)
  3. VSD
  4. Overriding aorta (overrides VSD)

*caused by anterosuperior displacement of infundibular septum

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16
Q

what kind of flow causes cyanosis?

A

R to L (unoxygneated blood into systemic circulation)

17
Q

why does squatting help during cyanotic episodes (tet spells) in tetralogy

A

increases peripheral vascular resistance, increasing afterload; increased L ventricular pressure forces blood L to R across the VSD

18
Q

tx for patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)

A

indomethacin–> NSAID that decreases prostaglandins and allows it to close

19
Q

where does coarctation of aorta occur in infants

A

proximal to insertion of ductus arteriosus–> this the only place aorta is receiving blood from

20
Q

what congenital anomaly is coarctation of aorta most commonly associated with

A

bicuspid aortic valve

21
Q

High BP in upper extremities, no pulses in lower extremities; pulsatile intercostal arteries

A

coarctation of aorta in adults–> occurs distal to ductus arteriosus (is now the ligamentum arteriosum)

*notching of ribs due to collateral flow through the intercostal arteries

22
Q

Truncus arteriosus, tetralogy of fallot associated w/ which genetic disorder

A

22q11 syndrome–> DiGeorge syndrome

*heart defect + hypocalcemia = Digeorge

23
Q

endocardial cushion defect (ASD, VSD, AV septal defects ass. w/

A

Down’s syndrome

  • as is AML, ALL, Alzheimer’s
24
Q

heart defects expected if congenital rubella

A
  1. septal defects
  2. PDA
  3. pulmonary artery stenosis
25
Q

coarctation of aorta associted w/ What other heart defect is commonly seen with this

A

Turner syndrome

*commonly have bicuspid aortic valve also

26
Q

Aortic insufficiency ass. w/

A

Marfans

*later, aortic dissection

27
Q

Infants of diabetic mothers have an increased risk of which heart defect

A

transposition of great vessels

28
Q

Adult coarctation of the aorta can eventually lead to heart failure symptoms because what happens

A

develop aortic regurgitation–> increased afterload due to obstructions wears the valve out over time

29
Q

what is Eisenmenger’s syndrome

A

reversal of a L to R shunt (VSD, ASD, PDA) to a R to L shunt

30
Q

pathgenesis of Eisenmengers

A

pulmonary vascular hypertension develops due to the increased left volume due to L to R shunt; eventually R side pressure exceed L side and the blood begins to flow from R to L

31
Q

4 symptoms of cyanotic heart dz

A
  1. cyanosis
  2. clubbing
  3. SOB
  4. polycythemia
  • seen later in L to R shunts and in Eisenmenger’s syndrome
32
Q

what is Ebstein anomaly ( 2 main features)

A
  1. Tricuspid leaflets are displaced into right ventricle–> tricuspid regurg or stenosis
  2. Hypoplastic right ventricle
33
Q

What happens in Ebstein due to the shitty tricuspid valve/ right ventricle

A

right atrium dilates–> due to poor flow through the malformed tricuspid into the small right ventricle

34
Q

what do 80% of children with Ebstein anomaly have associated (heart defect)

A

Patent foramen ovale-> R to L shunt (pressures are higher in the dilated right atrium)

35
Q

2 physical exam finding in Ebstein

A
  1. widely split S2

2. Tricuspid regurgitation

36
Q

What causes Ebstein malformation

A

maternal Li use

37
Q

2 arrythmias kids with Ebstein are at increased risk for

A
  1. WPW

2. supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT)