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Paediatric Cardiology: A

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Paediatric Cardiology: A review of Congenital Heart Disease and Clinical Problems Dr. Suzie Lee Pediatric Cardiologist Assistant Professor, University of Ottawa – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Paediatric Cardiology: A


1
Paediatric CardiologyA review of Congenital
Heart Disease and Clinical Problems
  • Dr. Suzie Lee
  • Pediatric Cardiologist
  • Assistant Professor, University of Ottawa

2
Objectives
  • To provide an outline of congenital heart disease
  • List criteria for Kawasaki syndrome
  • Describe the common innocent murmurs of childhood
  • Review of pediatric ECGs

3
An Outline of Congenital Heart Disease
  • Pink (Acyanotic)
  • Blue (Cyanotic)
  • Critical outflow tract obstruction

4
Acyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Normal Pulmonary Blood Flow
  • ? Pulmonary Blood Flow

5
Acyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Normal Pulmonary Blood Flow
  • Valve Lesions
  • Not fundamentally different from adults

6
Acyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • ? Pulmonary Blood Flow

7
Shunt Lesions
  • Atrial Level Shunt

8
ASD
  • Physiology
  • Left to Right shunt because of greater compliance
    of right ventricle
  • Loads right ventricle and right atrium
  • Increased pulmonary blood flow at normal pressure

9
ASD
  • History
  • Usually asymptomatic in childhood
  • Occasionally frequent respiratory tract
    infections
  • Presentation with murmur in childhood

10
ASD
  • Physical Examination
  • Right ventricular lift
  • Atrial level shunts result in right-sided volume
    overload
  • Wide fixed S2
  • Blowing SEM in pulmonic area
  • Murmur due to increased flow across the pulmonary

11
ASD
12
ASD
13
ASD
  • Natural History
  • Generally do well through childhood
  • Major complication atrial fibrillation
  • Can develop pulmonary hypertension / RV failure
    but not before third or fourth decade of life

14
ASD
  • Management
  • Device closure around three years of age or when
    found
  • Surgery for very large defects or outside fossa
    ovalis (eg. sinus venosus defect)

15
ASD
16
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17
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18
Shunt Lesions
  • Ventricular Level Shunt

19
VSD
  • Physiology
  • Left to Right shunt from high pressure left
    ventricle to low pressure right ventricle
  • Loads left atrium and left ventricle (right
    ventricle may see pressure load)

20
VSD
  • History
  • Small defects
  • Presentation with murmur in newborn period
  • Large defects
  • Failure to thrive (6 wks to 3 months)
  • Tachypnea, poor feeding, diaphoresis

21
VSD
  • Physical Examination
  • Active left ventricle
  • Small defect
  • Pansystolic murmur, normal split S2
  • Large defect
  • SEM, narrow split S2, diastolic murmur at apex
    from high flow across mitral valve

22
VSD
23
VSD
24
VSD
  • Natural History
  • Small defect
  • Often close
  • No real significance beyond endocarditis risk
  • Large defect
  • Failure to thrive
  • Progression to pulmonary hypertension as early as
    1 year

25
VSD
  • Management
  • Small defect
  • Conservative management
  • Large defect
  • Semi-elective closure if growth failure or
    evidence of increased pulmonary hypertension
  • Occasionally elective closure if persistent
    cardiomegaly beyond 3 years of age

26
Shunt Lesions
  • Great Artery Level Shunt

27
PDA
  • Physiology
  • Left to Right shunt from high pressure aorta to
    low pressure pulmonary artery
  • Loads left atrium and left ventricle (right
    ventricle may see pressure load)

28
PDA
  • History
  • Premature duct
  • Failure to wean from ventilator /- murmur
  • Older infant
  • Usually murmur from early infancy
  • Occasionally signs of heart failure

29
PDA
  • Physical Examination
  • Active left ventricle
  • Hyperdynamic pulses
  • Premature duct
  • SEM with diastolic spill
  • Older infant
  • Continuous murmur

30
PDA
  • Management
  • Premature Duct
  • Trial of indomethacin
  • Surgical ligation
  • Older infant
  • Leave until 1 year of age unless symptomatic
  • Coil / device closure
  • Rarely surgical ligation

31
Coarctation
  • Obstruction of the aortic arch
  • Classically juxtaductal, although may occur
    anywhere along the aorta
  • May develop over time
  • Femoral pulses should be checked routinely
    throughout childhood

32
Coarctation of the Aorta
  • History
  • Presentation varies with severity
  • Severe coarctation
  • Failure (shock) in early infancy
  • Mild coarctation
  • Murmur (in back)
  • Hypertension

33
Coarctation
  • Physical Examination
  • Absent femoral pulses
  • Arm leg gradient /- hypertension
  • Left ventricular tap
  • Bruit over back

34
Coarctation
  • Management
  • Newborn with CHF
  • Emergency surgical repair
  • Infant
  • Semi-elective repair in uncontrolled hypertension
  • Older child
  • Balloon arterioplasty /- stenting
  • Surgery on occasion
  • Failure to repair prior to adolescence recipe for
    life long hypertension

35
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36
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37
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Blue blood (deoxygenated hemoglobin) enters the
    arterial circulation
  • Systemic oxygen saturation is reduced
  • Cyanosis may or may not be clinically evident
  • 5g deoxygenated HgB

38
Causes of Cyanosis
  • Respiratory
  • Cardiac
  • Hematologic
  • Polycythemia
  • Hemoglobins with decreased affinity
  • Neurologic
  • Decreased Respiratory drive

39
Cyanosis
  • Respiratory
  • Cardiac
  • Hyperoxic test response to 100 O2
  • Lung disease should respond to 02
  • PO2 should rise to greater than 150 mmHg

40
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Increased pulmonary blood flow
  • Truncus arteriosus
  • Transposition of the great arteries
  • Total anomolous pulmonary venous return
  • Decreased pulmonary blood flow
  • Tetralogy of Fallot/pulmonary atresia
  • Tricuspid atresia
  • Critical pulmonary stenosis

41
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • ?Pulmonary Blood Flow

42
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Increased Pulmonary Blood Flow
  • TGA
  • TAPVD
  • Truncus arteriosus

43
TGA
44
Normal Heart
Body
RA
RV
PA
LA
LV
AO
Lungs
Circulation is in series
45
TGA
  • Circulation is in parallel
  • Body RA RV Ao
  • Lungs LA LV PA

46
TGA
  • Circulation is in parallel
  • Need for mixing

47
TGA
  • Must bring oygenated blood into the systemic
    circulation
  • Great artery level shunt - PDA
  • Atrial level shunt PFO
  • Prostaglandin E1 (PGE)
  • Re-opens and maintains patency of the ductus
    arteriosus
  • Balloon atrial septostomy (BAS)
  • Increase intracardiac shunting across the atrial
    septum

48
TGA
  • Body RA RV Ao
  • PFO BAS PDA PGE
  • Lungs LA LV PA

49
TGA
  • History
  • Presentation
  • Profound cyanosis shortly after birth
  • Particularly with restrictive ASD and/or closure
    of the ductus arrteriosus
  • Minimal or no murmur

50
TGA
  • Physical Examination
  • Profound cyanosis
  • Right ventricular tap
  • Loud single S2
  • Little or no murmur

51
TGA
  • Management
  • Prostaglandins to maintain mixing
  • Balloon atrial septostomy
  • Arterial switch repair in first week

52
Balloon Atrial Septostomy
53
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54
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55
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56
Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return
Pulmonary veins communicate with systemic vein
Pulmonary veins fail to connect to left atrium
57
Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return -
Supracardiac
Pulmonary veins communicate with systemic vein
Pulmonary veins fail to connect to left atrium
58
Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return -
Infracardiac
Pulmonary veins fail to connect to left atrium
Pulmonary veins communicate with systemic vein
59
TAPVD
  • History
  • Presentation depends on presence or absence of
    obstruction to venous return
  • Infradiaphragmatic
  • Almost always obstructed
  • Cyanosis and respiratory distress shortly after
    birth
  • Cardiac or supracardiac
  • Rarely obstructed
  • Can present like big ASD with cyanosis
  • Not a PGE dependent lesion

60
TAPVD
  • Physical Examination
  • Variable cyanosis (again depends on obstruction)
  • Right ventricular tap
  • Wide split S2
  • Blowing systolic ejection murmur

61
TAPVD
62
TAPVD
  • Management
  • If severe cyanosis in newborn
  • Emergency surgical repair
  • Unobstructed
  • Semi-elective surgical repair when discovered

63
Truncus arteriosus
  • 1. common, single outflow tract with pulmonary
    arteries originating from the ascending aorta
  • 2. abnormal truncal valve
  • 3. large VSD
  • 4. not a PGE dependent lesion

64
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow

65
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow
  • Tetralogy of Fallot/Pulmonary Atresia
  • Tricuspid Atresia
  • Critical pulmonary valve stenosis

66
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease - ? Pulmonary
Flow
  • RVOT Obstruction Shunt

67
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
  • Tetralogy of Fallot
  • 1. Pulmonary stenosis
  • 2. Overriding aorta
  • 3. RVH
  • 4. VSD
  • Generally not a PGE dependent lesion

68
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • History
  • Presentation depends on severity of PS
  • Severe stenosis
  • Cyanosis shortly after birth (as duct closes)
  • Mild stenosis
  • May present as heart murmur (from shortly after
    birth)

69
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Physical Examination
  • Variable cyanosis (remember the 50g/l rule)
  • Right ventricular tap
  • Decreased P2 /- ejection click
  • Tearing/harsh SEM

70
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Management
  • Outside the newborn period, surgical repair if
    symptomatic
  • Elective repair at 6 months
  • Role for beta blockers to palliate hypercyanotic
    spells

71
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Hypercyanotic Spells (Tet Spells)
  • Episodes of profound cyanosis
  • Most frequently after waking up or exercise

72
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Hypercyanotic Spells (Tet Spells)

Stress leading to fall in P02
Tachycardia and Hyperventilation
Increased R to L shunt
Increased Return of deeply desaturated venous
blood
73
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Hypercyanotic Spells (Tet Spells
  • Treatment
  • Tuck knees to chest
  • Reduces venous return by compressing femoral
    veins
  • Increases systemic vascular resistance
  • In hospital
  • O2
  • Phenylephrine
  • Morphine
  • IV beta blocker

74
Tetralogy of Fallot
75
Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow

76
Pulmonary atresia/VSD
  • Tetralogy of Fallot with atretic pulmonary valve
  • Variable pulmonary artery anatomy
  • Generally a PGE dependent lesion

77
Critical pulmonary stenosis
  • Severe pulmonary stenosis with inadequate
    pulmonary flow
  • Pulmonary atresia/intact ventricular septum
  • PGE dependent lesion

78
Tricuspid atresia
  • 1. tricuspid atresia
  • 2. severely hypoplastic RV
  • 3. VSD
  • 4. ASD large
  • 5. pulmonary stenosis
  • Variable
  • Generally a PGE dependent lesion

79
Cyanotic Heart Disease
  • Decreased blood flow due to RVOT obstruction may
    require augmentation of pulmonary blood flow via
    creation of a surgical systemic to pulmonary
    shunt
  • Blalock-Taussig Shunt (BTS)

80
Management of cyanotic HD
  • BTS

81
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82
Duct Dependent Congenital Heart Disease
  • Which of the following are examples of duct
    dependent CHD?
  • Pulmonary atresia
  • Patent ductus arteriosus
  • Transposition of the great arteries

83
Critical Left-Sided Obstruction
  • Neonatal presentation
  • Coarctation
  • Critical aortic stenosis
  • Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
  • Cardiogenic shock
  • PGE dependent lesion

84
Left-sided Obstruction
  • Coarctation of the aorta
  • Critical narrowing of the juxtaductal aorta
  • Blood cannot get past the obstruction

SHOCK
85
Coarctation
  • Characterized by weak or absent pulses
    particularly in the lower limbs
  • Initiation of PGE lifesaving
  • splitting of saturations seen in critical
    narrowings with patency of ductus arteriosus ie
    normal saturation in right arm and lower
    saturation in the lower limbs due to right to
    left shunting across the PDA

86
Coarctation - treatment
  • Surgical correction following initiation of PGE
    and stabilization

87
Left-Sided Obstruction
  • Critical Aortic Stenosis
  • CRITICAL
  • Inadequate forward
  • flow to maintain
  • cardiac output

SHOCK
88
Critical Aortic Stenosis
  • Management
  • Prostaglandins to provide source of systemic
    blood flow
  • Balloon valvuloplasty
  • Rarely surgery

89
Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Obstruction
  • Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS)
  • 1. Mitral atresia
  • 2. Aortic atresia
  • 3. Hypoplastic left ventricle
  • 4. Hypoplastic ascending aorta
  • PDA is the only source of systemic blood flow
  • PGE dependent lesion

90
HLHS
  • Initially cyanotic
  • With closure of the PDA SHOCK
  • Tachycardia, tachypnea, low blood pressure, weak
    pulses, poor perfusion, cyanotic/grey colour
  • PGE

91
Hypoplastic left heart
  • Management
  • Prostaglandins
  • Norwood procedure
  • Heart Transplant

92
Overview
  • Pink (acyanotic)
  • ASD, VDS, PDA
  • Blue (cyanotic)
  • In order of most common TOF, TGA, Truncus
    arteriosus, Tricuspid atresia, TAPVD
  • Critical outflow tract obstruction
  • HLHS, coarctation

93
Kawasaki Syndrome
  • Small artery arteritis
  • Coronary arteries most seriously effected
  • Dilatation/aneurysms progressing to (normal)
    stenosis

94
Kawasaki Syndrome
  • 5 days of fever plus 4 of
  • Rash
  • Cervical lymphadenopathy (at least 1.5 cm in
    diameter)
  • Bilateral conjuctival injection
  • Oral mucosal changes
  • Peripheral extremity changes
  • Swelling
  • Peeling (often late)

95
Kawasaki Syndrome
  • Associated Findings
  • Sterile pyuria
  • Hydrops of the gallbladder
  • Irritability

96
Kawasaki Syndrome
  • Epidemiology
  • Generally children lt 5 years
  • Male gt Female
  • Asian gt Black gt White

97
Kawasaki Syndrome
  • Management
  • Gamma globulin 2g/kg
  • 80 mg/kg ASA until afebrile then 5 mg/kg for 6
    weeks
  • Aneurysm in 18 of untreated patients
  • 4-8 if treated with high dose gammaglobulin
    and ASA
  • Mortality 0.1

98
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99
Innocent Murmurs
  • Characteristics
  • Always Grade III or less
  • Always systolic (occasionally continuous)
  • Blowing or musical quality
  • Not best heard in back

100
Innocent Murmurs
  • Types
  • Stills
  • Vibratory SEM best heard mid-left sternal border
  • Pulmonary Flow murmur
  • Blowing SEM best heard in PA
  • Venous Hum
  • peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis (PPS)
  • Blowing SEM best heard in PA radiating out to
    both axillae
  • Continuous murmur best heard in R infraclavicular
  • Decreases lying flat or with occlusion of neck
    veins
  • carotid Bruit
  • Short systolic murmur heart supraclavicularly
    secondary to flow from the Ao to the head and
    neck vessels

101
Pediatric ECGs
  • Brief review of pediatric ECGs
  • Physiologic reasons for differences

102
Pediatric ECGs
  • Electrical activation is the same as in adults
  • Electrodes are placed in the same position
  • Extra leads used in pediatric ECGs V3R, V4R, V7

103
Pediatric ECGs
  • ECG differences compared to adults
  • Gestational Age ratio LV/RV mass
  • Birth 0.81
  • 1 month 1.51
  • 6 months 2.01
  • Adult 2.51

104
Pediatric ECGs
  • P wave
  • Amplitude
  • lt2.5 mm all age

105
Pediatric ECGs
  • QRS Morphology
  • Axis
  • progressive leftward axis with increasing age
  • Morphology
  • age dependent
  • lt 80 msec lt 3 years
  • lt 90 msecs lt 18 years
  • Voltage
  • age dependent
  • small variability seen with sex.

106
Pediatric ECGs
  • T wave in V1
  • Subject of confusion
  • Upright at birth
  • Normally inverts between 3-7 days of life
  • Becomes upright again during adolecscence.

107
  • Heart Rate
  • 0-1 m onth 120/min
  • 10 years 100/min
  • gt16 years 70/min
  • QRS Axis
  • 0-1 month 180-70 (120)
  • 1 year 35-30 (60)
  • gt16 year 110-(-)15 (60)

108
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109
Pediatric ECGs
  • English
  • http//medstat.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/intro.html
  • Français
  • http//www.cardioped.org/abrege/notion.htm

110
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