Cases reported "Heart Defects, Congenital"

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1/126. GATA4 haploinsufficiency in patients with interstitial deletion of chromosome region 8p23.1 and congenital heart disease.

    Previous studies have shown that patients with deletion of distal human chromosome arm 8p may have congenital heart disease and other physical anomalies. The gene encoding GATA-4, a zinc finger transcription factor implicated in cardiac gene expression and development, localizes to chromosome region 8p23.1. To examine whether GATA-4 deficiency is present in patients with monosomy of 8p23.1 with congenital heart disease, we performed fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with a GATA4 probe on cells from a series of patients with interstitial deletion of 8p23.1. Four individuals with del(8)(p23.1) and congenital heart disease were found to be haploinsufficient at the GATA4 locus by FISH. The GATA4 gene was not deleted in a fifth patient with del(8)(p23.1) who lacked cardiac anomalies. FISH analysis on cells from 48 individuals with congenital heart disease and normal karyotypes failed to detect any submicroscopic deletions at the GATA4 locus. We conclude that haploinsufficiency at the GATA4 locus is often seen in patients with del(8)(p23.1) and congenital heart disease. Based on these findings and recent studies showing that haploinsufficiency for other cardiac transcription factor genes (e.g., TBX5, NKX2-5) causes congenital heart disease, we postulate that GATA-4 deficiency may contribute to the phenotype of patients with monosomy of 8p23.1.
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ranking = 1
keywords = deficiency
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2/126. Circumscribed intestinal protein loss with deficiency in CD4 lymphocytes after the fontan procedure.

    Protein-losing enteropathy is an important complication after right heart bypass operations (fontan procedure). Laboratory examinations usually reveal hypoalbuminaemia, hypoproteinaemia, elevated alpha(1)-antitrypsin clearance, and lymphocytopenia. A case of protein-losing enteropathy after fontan procedure is reported with a circumscribed protein loss in the region of the terminal ileum despite good haemodynamics. The patient developed only mild hypoalbuminaemia and no diarrhoea but severe cellular and humoral immune abnormalities, namely a markedly decreased proportion of CD4 lymphocytes but normal proportion of CD8 lymphocytes (CD4 14%, CD8 23%) and decreased serum levels of immunoglobulin g. Intestinal biopsies revealed normal mucosa. This report is unique as it is the first to describe a ratio of CD4 to CD8 lymphocytes <1 due to an almost selective loss of CD4 lymphocytes and a circumscribed intestinal protein loss in a patient who developed protein-losing enteropathy after Fontan operation. CONCLUSION: There is a severe decrease of CD4 lymphocytes of unknown origin in a patient with circumscribed intestinal protein loss after Fontan operation. Passive leakage of lymph fluid due to abnormal systemic venous pressure is not a sufficient explanation of the almost selective loss of CD4 lymphocytes. Primary or secondary activation of the immune system may influence structural integrity and permeability of the intestinal wall and may play a triggering role in protein-losing enteropathy after the fontan procedure.
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ranking = 2
keywords = deficiency
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3/126. Early therapeutic experience with the endothelin antagonist BQ-123 in pulmonary hypertension after congenital heart surgery.

    OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of endothelin type A (ET(A)) receptor antagonism in infants with pulmonary hypertension following corrective surgery for congenital heart disease. DESIGN: Open label, preliminary study. SETTING: Tertiary paediatric cardiothoracic surgical centre. patients: Three infants (aged 3 weeks, 7 weeks, and 8 months) with postoperative pulmonary hypertension unresponsive to conventional treatment, including inhaled nitric oxide. INTERVENTIONS: patients received incremental intravenous infusions (0.1 to 0.3 mg/kg/h) of the ET(A) receptor antagonist BQ-123. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The response to BQ-123 administration was determined using continuous invasive monitoring of cardiorespiratory variables. RESULTS: BQ-123 infusion caused a reduction in the ratio of pulmonary to systemic pressures (0.62 (0.01) to 0.52 (0.03), mean (SEM)) with an accompanying decrease in right ventricular stroke work index (4.6 (0.4) to 2.5 (0.3) g/m) and a tendency for the cardiac index to rise (2.1 (0.2) to 2.7 (0.6) l/min/kg/m(2)). This was associated with a well tolerated fall in the arterial partial pressure of oxygen (16.5 (4.1) to 12.4 (3.3) kPa) and mean systemic arterial pressure (57 (3) to 39 (3) mm Hg). CONCLUSIONS: ET(A) receptor antagonism in infants with postoperative pulmonary hypertension after corrective surgery for congenital heart disease led to significant improvement in pulmonary haemodynamic indices. However, these benefits were associated with reductions in systemic blood pressure and arterial oxygen saturation, the latter consistent with a ventilation-perfusion mismatch. On the basis of these results, studies in pulmonary hypertension will need to proceed with caution.
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ranking = 4.0161910378959
keywords = oxygen
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4/126. The 3C syndrome: evolution of the phenotype and growth hormone deficiency.

    The 3C syndrome (cranio-cerebello-cardiac dysplasia or the Ritscher-Schinzel syndrome) is a recently delineated condition involving abnormalities of the cranium (large head with prominent forehead), cerebellum (Dandy-Walker cyst and vermis hypoplasia), and cardiac (primarily septal) defects. At least 20 individuals with this condition have been reported in the past 11 years. We report on a girl with the 3C syndrome who at 13 years of age is the oldest patient reported to date. She has been followed since birth, allowing us to show the evolution of her phenotype over time. In addition, she has documented growth hormone deficiency. We suggest that growth hormone deficiency should be considered as a possible cause of the short stature often seen in this condition.
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ranking = 3
keywords = deficiency
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5/126. CATCH 22 syndrome: report of 7 infants with follow-up data and review of the recent advancements in the genetic knowledge of the locus 22q11.

    CATCH 22 is a medical acronym for Cardiac defects, Abnormal facies, Thymic hypoplasia, cleft palate, and hypocalcemia, and a variable deletion on chromosome 22. The deletion within the chromosome region of 22q11 may occur in patients with three well-described dysmorphologic cardiological syndromes: digeorge syndrome (DGS), velocardiofacial syndrome (VCFS), and conotruncal anomaly face syndrome (CTAFS). We report in detail seven infants with a deletion of the locus 22q11 showing overlapping clinical features of DGS and CTAFS with complex congenital heart defects (double outlet right ventricle, atresia or stenosis of the pulmonary valve, atrial and ventricular septal defects, patent ductus arteriosus, tetralogy of fallot, major aortopulmonary collateral arteries, arcus aortae dexter, and persistence of the left superior vena cava). A homograft was implanted between the right ventricle and the main stem of the pulmonary artery in 2 patients, while a balloon valvuloplastic of the pulmonary valve was performed in one patient only. Pulmonary hemorrhage, acute hypoxia, and aspergillus pneumonia were the complications. death occurred in three out of seven patients. Recent advancements in the genetic knowledge of the locus 22q11 are described. Since the locus 22q11 is highly heterogeneous, the CATCH 22 acronym should be used and temporarily the old eponyms should be abandoned waiting for the identification of the different genes.
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ranking = 5.6934361381938
keywords = hypoxia
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6/126. Left superior vena cava connection to unroofed coronary sinus associated with positional cyanosis: successful transcatheter treatment using Gianturco-Grifka vascular occlusion device.

    A persistent left superior vena cava connection to an unroofed coronary sinus is a rare cardiac anomaly that is associated with a variable degree of cyanosis. We report an infant with this condition and the unusual feature of cyanosis dependent on head position. When the patient's head was rotated to the left, he developed severe stenosis of the left internal jugular vein, enlarged cervical collateral veins that connected to the right superior vena cava and had an oxygen saturation 95%. When the patient's head was rotated to the right, the left internal jugular vein was widely patent and systemic oxygen saturation decreased to 87%. There was no right ventricular volume overload. Temporary occlusion of the left superior vena cava documented tolerable proximal venous pressure. cyanosis was relieved by transcatheter closure of the left superior vena cava with a Gianturco-Grifka vascular occlusion device. Cathet. Cardiovasc. Intervent. 48:369-373, 1999.
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ranking = 4.0161910378959
keywords = oxygen
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7/126. Doppler echocardiographic evaluation of the hemodynamics in absent aortic valve.

    hemodynamics were estimated by Doppler echocardiography in a neonate with an absent aortic valve and absent or extremely hypoplastic mitral valve. The coronary blood flow depended on the increased end-diastolic pressure of the left ventricle. Pulmonary venous congestion, which was also due to the increased end-diastolic pressure of the left ventricle, may induce decreased oxygen saturation and, subsequently, further myocardial hypoxia, poor contraction and increased end-diastolic pressure of the left ventricle. Finally, hypoxic blood was supplied to each organ from the pulmonary artery through the ductus arteriosus, which induced severe acidosis and differential cyanosis after birth.
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ranking = 7.7015316571418
keywords = hypoxia, oxygen
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8/126. ectopia cordis and other midline defects.

    BACKGROUND: Thoracic ectopia cordis and other midline defects are rare congenital anomalies that often occur with other intracardiac defects. Despite significant improvements in neonatal and infant cardiac surgeries, operations for thoracoabdominal ectopia cordis carry an extremely high mortality with only a few reported survivors of thoracic ectopia cordis. methods: The clinical charts of 4 patients with ectopia cordis over a 6-year period were reviewed. Three of the patients showed varying degrees of Cantrell's Pentalogy; thoracic ectopia cordis was found in 1. We have reviewed our surgical strategies and reported the patients' clinical outcomes. RESULTS: All 4 patients are alive at follow-up. Two infants with double-outlet right ventricle have been fully corrected, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was necessary in 1 infant for cardiac failure following the cardiac repair. A newborn with thoracoabdominal ectopia cordis underwent primary repair of his diaphragmatic defect, and a silo was used to progressively reduce the omphalocele. He is currently awaiting elective repair of tetralogy of fallot. Lastly, the patient with thoracic ectopia cordis underwent successful soft tissue coverage, and she is being followed in the clinic with restrictive muscular ventricular septal defects and a left ventricular diverticulum. CONCLUSIONS: Our experience along with other reports in the literature demonstrates that patients with thoracic and thoracoabdominal ectopia cordis can undergo and survive full cardiac, neurologic, and abdominal repair during infancy. Furthermore we advocate different approaches determined by the severity of the presentation and the presence of other complicating factors.
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ranking = 2.0080955189479
keywords = oxygen
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9/126. Bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis after cardiac surgery: ventilatory assistance by nasal mask continuous positive airway pressure.

    The case of an 8-month-old boy with bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis after surgical reoperation for congenital heart disease is presented. In order to avoid repeated intubation and long-term mechanical ventilation or tracheotomy, we used nasal mask continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) as an alternative method for assisted ventilation. Within 24 hours the boy accepted the nasal mask and symptoms such as dyspnea and sweating disappeared. Respiratory movements became regular and oxygen saturation increased. Nasal mask CPAP may serve as an alternative treatment of bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis in infants, thereby avoiding tracheotomy or long-term mechanical ventilation.
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ranking = 2.0080955189479
keywords = oxygen
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10/126. Bifurcation of the left superior pulmonary vein, associated with an anomalous connection with the left atrium.

    An unusual case of bifurcation of the left superior pulmonary vein (LSPV) just before it enters the pericardium is described. The LSPV, which at the hilus of the lung originated from normal confluence of a superior and inferior root, bifurcated near the left atrium (LAt) of the heart into anterior (AB) and posterior (PB) branches that, separately invaginating the parietal pericardium, formed two individual serous sheaths. The PB coursed almost horizontally and opened, as usual, into the supero-dorsal wall of the LAt. The AB turned downward, reached the superior margin of the left auricle (LAu) and emptied into it. Thus, the AB was interposed between the pulmonary trunk and the LAt obstructing on the left side the communication between the transverse sinus of the pericardium and the pericardial cavity. The auricular opening of the AB was avalvular, but, unlike those of the normal pulmonary veins (PVs) which are surrounded by a large smooth inner surface, was, except for a narrow smooth-walled zone, close to the pectinate muscles. Moreover, an inferior muscular ridge at the inferior margin of its orifice of entrance into the LAu, separated it from the cavity of the LAt. It is well known that in development the PVs arise from convergence of capillaries belonging to the mediastinal part of the primitive splanchnic plexus and drain this into the systemic (cardinal and vitello-umbilical) veins of the embryo. As a consequence, it might be hypothesized that the AB of the LSPV probably represents a partial remnant either of a pulmonary-cardinal anastomotic mediastinal vein, or of a diverging vessel of the mediastinal plexus from which the PVs originate. In either case the AB became absorbed by the LAu, which, while it was developing on the left side of the primitive truncus arteriosus, drew the AB forward and downward, in the direction of its movement. The influence of such an anomaly of the PVs for altered intracardiac hemodynamics of the oxygenated blood flow has to be emphasized. Furthermore, the particular location of the AB, obstructing the communication between transverse sinus and pericardial cavity, can be a hindrance during cardio-pulmonary surgery.
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ranking = 2.0080955189479
keywords = oxygen
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