Circulation, Vol 53, 930-938, Copyright © 1976 by American Heart Association
JL Wilkinson, RH Anderson, R Arnold, DI Hamilton and A Smith
We have studied the disposition of the cardiac conducting tissues in four
hearts from situs solitus individuals possessing primitive ventricles
without outlet chambers. These hearts correspond to the type of
univentricular heart defined as common ventricle by Lev. All the hearts
studied possessed normally positioned great arteries. Two groups, each
consisting of two hearts, could be distinguished. The first type possessed
a small posterior ridge which divided the posterior portion of the
primitive ventricle into right and left ventricular sinuses. The papillary
muscles to the atrioventricular valves were separate structures and arose
on each side of this posterior ridge. The conducting tissues in these
hearts arose from an atrioventricular node situated in the atrial septum
but deviated posteriorly. The atrioventricular bundle pierced the fibrous
annulus posteriorly and descended on the posterior ridge, lying to its left
side. A bifurcation was not identified, and bundle branches were not
present. The other two hearts had no posterior ridge. A common posterior
papillary muscle supported both atrioventricular valves, and in one a
marked anterior muscle bar produced obstruction of the pulmonary outflow
tract. The connecting atrioventricular node was situated laterally in the
right atrioventricular valve orifice, and the atrioventricular bundle
descended into the right parietal wall of the primitive ventricle. A
bifurcation and bundle branches were not observed. The disposition of
conducting tissue in these hearts differs from that found in "primitive
ventricle with outlet chamber" in that the connecting atrioventricular node
and bundle are situated anteriorly and are intimately related to the
transposed pulmonary artery outflow tract in the latter anomaly. The
surgical significance of these findings is emphasized.
ARTICLES
The conducting tissues in primitive ventricular hearts without an outlet chamber
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