Circulation, Vol 83, 2094-2100, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
K Momma, M Ando, A Takao and S Miyagawa-Tomita
BACKGROUND. Recent advances in fetal echocardiography have necessitated
further study on fetal in situ cardiovascular morphology of truncus
arteriosus and the effects of truncal valve insufficiency. METHODS AND
RESULTS. We studied 55 fetal rats with truncus arteriosus among 300 fetuses
from 40 virgin females treated with 200 mg fertilysin on the 10th day of
pregnancy. After rapid whole-body freezing on the 21st day, the fetuses
were studied by means of serial cross-sectional photographs of the frozen
thorax. Thirty-five fetuses with a normal heart treated with fertilysin
served as controls. Truncus arteriosus was characterized by a large
ventricular septal defect, a solitary artery (truncus arteriosus)
overriding the ventricular septum, the right and left pulmonary arteries
originating from the truncus arteriosus with or without a common trunk
(main pulmonary artery), and absent ductus arteriosus. Fetuses with truncal
valve insufficiency had thick truncal valves, a large truncus arteriosus,
and large ventricles. The subgroup of 12 fetuses with a large truncus
(truncal diameter greater than 160% of the ascending aorta diameter in the
controls) showed significantly greater values for right ventricular volume
(200% of control) and mass (120% of control), left ventricular volume (170%
of control) and mass (110% of control), right (120% of control) and left
(110% of control) atrial volume, and pericardial fluid (140% of control)
than the controls. These changes were less prominent and ventricular
volumes were not increased in the remaining subgroup with a truncal
diameter of 160% or less of aorta diameter in the controls. CONCLUSIONS. In
fetal truncus arteriosus, truncal valve insufficiency was associated with
increased ventricular volume load and incomplete cardiac compensation in
rats.
ARTICLES
Fetal cardiovascular morphology of truncus arteriosus with or without truncal valve insufficiency in the rat
Department of Pediatric Cardiology, Heart Institute of Japan, Tokyo Women's Medical College.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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D. B. McElhinney, V. M. Reddy, H. A. Rajasinghe, B. N. Mora, N. H. Silverman, and F. L. Hanley Trends in the Management of Truncal Valve Insufficiency Ann. Thorac. Surg., February 1, 1998; 65(2): 517 - 524. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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