Pathophysiology of Congenital Heart Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is specific to congenital heart disease as opposed to broader heart disease?

A

You are born with it - resulting from incorrect embryological development

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2
Q

Name two syndromes resulting from chromosome abnormalities that are associated with congenital heart disease (CHD for the purpose of these flashcards).

A

Downs

Turners

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3
Q

What is a branchial arch?

A

Primitive arches giving rise to blood vessels post-natallly

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4
Q

What does the 4th arch give rise to?

A

Right: Right Subclavian Artery
Left: Arch of Aorta

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5
Q

What is the most common failure leading to CHD?

A

Septation

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6
Q

How is the fossa ovalis kept open?

A

Pressure from r. atrium is strong so blasts through premium and secundum

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7
Q

What does failure of septation lead to

A

VSD & ASD

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8
Q

Failure of development leads to…?

A

Obstruction - atresia, stanosis or coarctation (narrowing) (of aorta)
Hypoplasia

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9
Q

What is dextracardia?

A

Heart is on the wrong side

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10
Q

What does failure of or incorrect rotation lead to?

A

TGA & congenitally corrected transposition of great vessels; dextrocardia

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11
Q

What does ‘failure of closure’ refer to?

A

Ductus arteriosus

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12
Q

What can be the result of pulmonary flow being greater than systemic flow (Qp>Qs)? (shunt ratio)

A

Heart failure

Reactive pulmonary hypertension

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13
Q

What is the definition of cyanosis?

A

Greater than 5g of haemoglobin per decilitre of blood being deoxygenated

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14
Q

What is the definition of pulmonary hypertension?

A

> 30mmHg systolic pressure (resulting from increased Qp)

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15
Q

What two things can keep the foetal circulation going during surgery?

A

Prostaglandins

Rashkind

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16
Q

What is polycythaemia?

A

Abnormally increased haemoglobin in the blood, most likely through overexertion of erythropoietin so increased RBC production and large hematocrit population

17
Q

What is pulmonary hypertension and what is it caused by?

A

High flow through pulmonary bed caused by genetic influences

18
Q

Where can differential cyanosis (pink top, blue bottom) be observed? Give more details about this ‘complex’.

A

Eisenmenger’s Complex
Left to right shunt reverses to become right to left shunt causing cyanosis
- murmur disappears

19
Q

What is the difference between ostium secundum ASD and ostium premium ASD?

A

Where the hole is: in secundum it is generally in isolation; in primum it is generally in association with other defects or factors

20
Q

Generally speaking, is there a murmur present in ASD?

A

No

21
Q

Generally speaking, is there a murmur present in VSD?

A

Yes

22
Q

What does aortic coarctation cause?

A

Systemic hypertension

23
Q

In which gender is aortic coarctation more common?

A

Males

24
Q

What is the treatment of aortic coarctation?

A

Balloon dilatation (or surgery)

25
Q

What does the Tetralogy of Fallot cause?

A

Cyanotic Heart Disease

26
Q

What does the Tetralogy of Fallot cause?

A

Cyanosis