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1. Neonatal Cardiology
2. Goals Review both fetal and neonatal cardiac physiology
Understand what murmurs are, how they occur, and how to describe them
Discuss several types of congenital heart disease and how to distinguish them
Review common genetic syndromes and their associated heart defects
3. Normal Cardiac Anatomy
4. Differences in the Fetus Foramen Ovale
Ductus Arteriosus
Right heart is the dominant ventricle – pumps 2/3 of cardiac output
Relative RVH in utero
5. Differences in the Fetus
6. Differences in the Fetus
7. Changes after Birth Pulmonary Vascular Resistance begins to fall immediately
Foramen Ovale closes – within the first hour
Ductus Arteriosus closes – up to 48 hours can be normal
Left heart now the dominant side
Process continues for up to 6-8 weeks
8. Cardiac Evaluation History
Exam:
Inspection
Palpation
Auscultation
9. History Prematurity
Maternal pregnancy complications (DM, PIH, infections, teratogen exposure)
Abnormal ultrasounds
Family history of congenital heart disease
10. History Infants symptoms:
Tachypnea
Diaphoresis
Fatigue
Cyanosis
Especially if any symptoms with feeding (exercise for babies)
11. Physical exam – inspection and palpation Inspection
Chest symmetric, normal shape
Other systems (dysmorphic, edema, cyanosis, clubbing)
Palpation
PMI
Thrills (palpable murmurs)
Pulses (brachial and femoral)
12. Cardiac Exam – Auscultation Rate and rhythm
Heart sounds
Extra sounds
Murmurs
13. What is a heart murmur? Results from turbulent blood flow, typically from the pressure difference between adjacent cardiac structures
Can be normal (physiologic, benign, flow, transitional, etc) vs abnormal (pathologic)
Most (80%) children will have soft murmurs in the perinatal period
14. Murmurs Location
Radiation
Timing (systolic, diastolic, continuous)
Intensity (1-6 systolic, 1-4 diastolic)
Pitch (high frequency [diaphragm better] vs low frequency [bell better])
Quality
15. Benign Murmurs Pulmonary flow (LUSB, soft)
Peripheral pulmonary branch stenosis (axillae, back)
Neonatal Still’s murmur (LLSB, “vibratory” or “musical”)
Venous hum (continuous, under either clavicle but R more often than L)
18. RED FLAGS Diastolic murmurs (only venous hum is OK)
Continuous murmurs (PDA should be gone by 48 hours)
Loud murmurs + thrills
SYMPTOMS, especially cyanosis
19. Pathologic murmurs Caused by abnormal anatomy or communications and the turbulent blood flow through them
Typically from problems with valves (pulmonic stenosis, aortic stenosis), narrowings (coarctation) or holes where they shouldn’t be (VSD, ASD, PDA)
20. Acyanotic Heart Disease VSD
May not hear at birth until PVR drops
Typically holosystolic (engulfs S1 and S2)
Typically loudest LLSB
May have a thrill
Louder murmurs are typically smaller holes (greater pressure difference)
23. Acyanotic Heart Disease Patent Ductus Arteriosus
Continuous, “machine like” murmur
Best under L clavicle
Should disappear by 48 hours
25. Acyanotic Heart Disease Coarctation of the aorta
Often can’t appreciate until ductus arteriosus closes, then rapid detioration
Systolic ejection murmur best LUSB and over back
Decreased femoral pulses
27. Cyanotic Heart Disease Most infants with cyanotic heart disease are cyanotic at birth, so shouldn’t be in Level II
Check mucous membranes, nailbeds, etc (all infants can get perioral vascular congestion which isn’t real cyanosis)
Caused by shunting of blood from the right to the left (deoxygenated blood)
The 5 “Terrible T’s”
28. Truncus Arteriosus Only one vessel coming off the ventricles
31. Transposition of the Great Arteries Aorta off the RV, Pulmonary artery off the LV
Must have mixing (ASD, VSD, PDA) or incompatible with life
“Egg on a string” x-ray
Often no murmur
35. Tricuspid Atresia (and Ebstein’s) Tricuspid valve is closed (atresia) or displaced and dysfunctional (Ebstein’s)
HUGE heart on x-ray (mainly right atrium)
38. Tetralogy of Fallot VSD
Overriding aorta
Right ventricular hypertrophy
Pulmonary stenosis
“Boot shaped heart” on x-ray
Murmur is from pulmonic stenosis, not from VSD
41. Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return (TAPVR) Pulmonary veins come back somewhere besides the left atrium
If obstructed, is the only pediatric cardiac surgical EMERGENCY
CXR is “snowman in a snowstorm”
44. “Terrible” hypoplastic left heart syndrome Spectrum of disease, extreme form has almost no left ventricle, mitral atresia, aortic atresia, coarctation of the aorta
As PDA closes, no blood to body – incompatible with life
Often very non-specific physical exam, CXR
46. And now for some EKG reading!
48. Genetic syndromes associated with CHD Trisomy 13
PDA, septal defects, pulmonic and aortic stenosis
Trisomy 18
VSD, polyvalvular disease, coronary abnormalities
Trisomy 21 – 45% have heart defect
AV canal, VSD, PDA, anomalous subclavian artery
All need echo
49. More Syndromes Turner (XO)
30% bicuspid aortic valve; 10% coarctation
Noonan
pulmonary valve stenosis, ASD
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 20%
DiGeorge/ VCF/ 22q11
Interrupted aortic arch, right aortic arch
truncus arteriosus, tetrology of Fallot, pulmonary atresia with VSD
50. And more syndromes! Marfan:
dilatation of ascending aorta/ aortic sinus, aortic and mitral insufficiency
VACTERL:
VSD in majority of cases
Williams:
supravalvular aortic stenosis, pulmonary artery stenosis
51. More syndromes again… Ellis-van Creveld:
ASD or single
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome:
VSD
Holt-Oram:
atrial and ventricular septal defects, arrhythmias
52. Last page of syndromes! Pompe disease: (glycogen storage)
cardiomyopathy
MPS:
storage of MPS in arteries, valves w/ insufficiency and stenosis
Hyperlipoproteinemia:
premature atherosclerosis
Freidrich ataxia:
cardiomyopathy
Muscular dystrophy:
myocardial degeneration and fibrosis
53. Key Points Neonatal period, and particularly the first few days, are a time of great change
Most murmurs are benign, but if its loud, harsh, diastolic, or the infant has symptoms, be concerned
1-2-3-4-5 cyanotic heart diseases
Genetic syndromes have commonly associated heart defects
54. Any Questions ?