Circulation, Vol 52, 671-677, Copyright © 1975 by American Heart Association
BJ Maron, WL Henry, JM Griffith, RM Freedom, DT Kelly and SE Epstein
Real-time, two dimensional echocardiography was used to identify great
artery relations in 23 infants and small children, including 16 patients
with angiography documented transposition of the great arteries, tetralogy
of Fallot, or pulmonary aresia. Using this technique, the heart was scanned
perpendicular to its long axis at the origin of the great arteries. Great
arteries cross-sectioned perpendicular to their long axes appear as
circles; when sectioned longitudinally these arteries appeared as elongated
sausage-shaped structures. I- patients with normally related great
arteries, a curcular structure (aorta) always was positioned posterior to
an elongated, sausage-shaped structure (distal right ventricular outflow
tract and proximal main pulmonary artery). In transposition of the great
arteries, two adjacent circular structures were observed; the anterior
circle (aorta) was located to the right, left or directly anterior to the
posterior circle (pulmonary artery). In pulmonary atresia or hypoplasis, a
large posterior circle (aorta) was associated with an anteriorly positioned
structure that was either short and small (atretic right ventricular
outflow tract) or elongated with an area of severe narrowing (hypoplastic
right ventricular outflow tract). Thus, real-time two-dimensional
echocardiography provides a rapid, noninvasive means of accurately
identifying congenital malformations of the great arteries in infants and
small children and may be a useful adjunct to cardiac catheterization in
the diagnosis of cyanotic congenital heart disease.
ARTICLES
Identification of congenital malformations of the great arteries in infants by real-time two-dimensional echocardiography
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