Circulation, Vol 54, 689-697, Copyright © 1976 by American Heart Association
TN James, TK Marshall and JE Edwards
Abnormalities of cardiac rhythm have been reported by others in patients
with a persistent left superior vena cava. We present the histological
findings from postmortem examination of the cardiac conduction system of
two such patients. The first patient was a schoolboy who died suddenly and
unexpectedly. His sinus node was abnormally small, his A-V node contained
numerous venous lacunae and was stretched out beneath the enlarged coronary
sinus, both A-V node and His bundle were dispersed in the central fibrous
body in a fetal pattern, and isolated fragments of A-V nodal tissue were
connected to the myocardium at the crest of the interventricular septum.
The second patient complained of palpitations many months prior to surgical
correction of an interventricular septal defect; his postoperative course
included multiple arrhythmias and he died suddenly on the 16th
postoperative day. Although his sinus node was histologically normal, the
nutrient artery contained a polypoid fibromuscular mass virtually
occluding its lumen; his A-V node and His bundle were also dispersed in the
central fibrous body in the fetal pattern, and the A-V node contained
numerous venous lacunae as well as being histologically disorganized in its
cytological pattern. These anatomical findings may indicate a basis for
various forms of cardiac electrical instability, and deserve consideration
in the future evaluation of any patient found to have a persistent left
superior vene cava, but particularly if there is clinical evidence
suggesting an arrhythmia or conduction disturbance.
ARTICLES
De subitaneis mortibus. XX. Cardiac electrical instability in the presence of a left superior vena cava
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