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Recent decades have seen great growth in the number of adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD). Between 1985 and 2000, the number of adults with congenital heart disease has doubled, resulting in approximately 1 million adult survivors in the United States who are increasingly having late complications. This is accompanied by a similar increase in hospitalizations as more adult patients develop late complications of disease. As this population has emerged, adult caregivers are seeing more congenital heart disease in practice but may have little training in providing care for it. The anatomy and nomenclature of congenital heart disease is often intimidating to a cardiologist treating ACHD, but the care in most cases is analogous to that of other adult patients. For example, the care of a young adult with heart failure from a failing systemic right ventricle (RV) is modeled after the deep clinical experience caring for patients with left ventricular (LV) failure. Being aware of congenital anatomy and the complications that are frequently seen in common congenital lesions, however, is important to help focus on the likely diagnosis and optimal treatment plan.
In general, patients with congenital heart disease come to medical attention as adults because they have one or more of the conditions presented in Box 33.1 .
Congenital aortic stenosis
Isolated mitral valve disease
Isolated patent foramen ovale (PFO) or small atrial septal defect (ASD)
Isolated small ventricular septal defect (VSD)
Mild pulmonary stenosis
Previous ligated or occluded patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)
Repaired isolated ASD
Repaired isolated VSD
ASD
PDA
Ebstein disease
Coarctation of the aorta
Tetralogy of Fallot
Coarctation of the aorta
Single ventricles
D-transposition of the great vessels with atrial or arterial switch
Tricuspid atresia with Fontan operation
Severe pulmonary vascular disease (Eisenmenger syndrome)
Patients with very small pulmonary arteries located where focalization or shunts are not possible
Most of these lesions never present as cardiac emergencies. However, unique conditions related to surgical techniques and long-term physiologic burdens do generate potential for emergent presentations in this patient group. These conditions include the history of incisions in the atrium or ventricle affecting the conduction system or forming fibrous scars as the basis for arrhythmias, an anatomic RV functioning as a systemic ventricle for decades, and residual lesions forming substrate for infective endocarditis ( Table 33.1 ). Another example is the fall in systemic vascular resistance in these patients with Eisenmenger syndrome who become pregnant increases the right-to-left shunt and results in arterial desaturation.
Life Threatening a | Not Life Threatening | |
---|---|---|
Arrhythmia | AF with bypass tract | |
Atrial flutter | AF without bypass tract | |
Atrial arrhythmias in Mustard or Fontan procedures | CHB: normal hemodynamics and nodal escape | |
CHB with hypotension or CHF and/or ventricular escape | Isolated PVCs | |
Ventricular tachyarrhythmias with symptoms | Asymptomatic, nonsustained VT | |
Ischemia | Ongoing chest pain with ischemic ECG changes | Chronic nonischemic chest pain |
Ventricular failure | New murmur + fever Compromising pleural effusion or ascites |
|
Cyanosis | Loss of continuous murmur in patient with BT or central shunt Acute pulmonary infection |
Chronic cyanosis |
Noncardiac | Hemoptysis Transient ischemic attacks or seizures (new onset) |
Gout Biliary colic |
Most emergent complications seen in congenital heart disease, however, are similar to the emergency situations seen in adults with acquired rather than congenital heart disease. For example, the diagnosis of ventricular tachycardia in a patient with repaired tetralogy of Fallot is treated in a manner similar to the patient with coronary disease and ventricular tachycardia—unfortunately, with the same uncertain efficacy. What is important to remember is that a patient with repaired tetralogy of Fallot is at risk of developing ventricular tachycardia and to recognize the importance of investigating complaints of palpitations, presyncope, and syncope. Substantial analogies to the care of general cardiac patients exist, but this needs to be combined with knowledge of what complications to expect with what lesion and management needs to be tailored to an ACHD patient's unique anatomy ( Table 33.2 ).
Lesion | Special Considerations |
---|---|
Tetralogy of Fallot | Ventricular tachycardia |
Atrial fibrillation | |
Right ventricular dysfunction | |
Pulmonary regurgitation (late complication usually associated with moderate to severe regurgitation) | |
Fontan | Ventricular dysfunction |
Sinus node dysfunction | |
Atrial flutter/IART | |
Fontan obstruction or leak | |
Pulmonary embolus | |
D-transposition of great arteries | Atrial flutter/IART |
Systemic right ventricular dysfunction | |
AV block (uncommon late) | |
Baffle systemic AV valve regurgitation | |
Sinus node dysfunction with junctional rhythm (usually asymptomatic) | |
L-transposition of great arteries | Systemic ventricular failure |
AV block | |
Systemic AV valve regurgitation | |
WPW (2%–4%) | |
Coarctation | Dissection |
Bicuspid valve with endocarditis, regurgitation, or stenosis | |
Early coronary artery disease or heart failure | |
Cerebral aneurysm | |
Left-to-right shunt | Pulmonary hypertension (Eisenmenger syndrome) |
Atrial fibrillation | |
Endocarditis (VSD or PDA, rare with ASD) | |
Right-to-left shunt (cyanotic) | Paradoxical embolus |
Worsening cyanosis | |
Brain abscess | |
Bleeding diathesis | |
Hyperviscosity syndrome with erythrocytosis | |
Protein-losing enteropathy | |
Marfan syndrome | Dissection |
Aortic valve regurgitation | |
Mitral valve prolapse |
Congenital heart disease can predispose the patient to certain complications that may be responsible for precipitating a cardiac emergency. For example, in a patient with L-transposition of the great vessels and shortness of breath, the RV is acting as the systemic ventricle and is prone to failure. The diagnosis of heart failure is not difficult and treatment is similar to the treatment of congestive heart failure due to other conditions.
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