Isolated hypoplastic right ventricle - a challenge in medical practice.

Rom J Morphol Embryol

Department of Internal Medicine, Family Medicine and Labor Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, Romania;

Published: September 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Isolated right ventricle hypoplasia (IRVH) is a congenital heart disease where the right ventricle is underdeveloped, leading to various structural defects and clinical symptoms.
  • Diagnostic and treatment methods for right ventricle hypoplasia are tailored to the severity of heart defects, the patient's age, and clinical features, with less severe cases often resolved through fewer procedures.
  • Severe forms of RVH, especially those presenting symptoms in newborns, require immediate intervention and may lead to multiple surgeries over time, highlighting the importance of early referral to pediatric cardiology for isolated symptoms.

Article Abstract

Isolated right ventricle hypoplasia (IRVH) is a disease characterized by an underdeveloped right ventricle. It is a congenital heart disease than can associate heterogeneous structural defects and nonspecific clinical features, which can often present a challenging therapeutic management. In this article, there are presented diagnostic methods and treatment options for right ventricle hypoplasia (RVH) according to clinical features, patients age and associated structural heart defects. RVH has a different prognosis in accordance with the severity of the heart defects and the patient's age at which the diagnosis is established. Thus, isolated forms of RVH generally present mild structural and functional defects that can be associated with the onset of symptoms in adolescence or even in adulthood. In these cases, atrial septal defect closure with or without superior cavo-pulmonary anastomosis can be the only procedures needed to correct the hemodynamic abnormalities and relief the symptomatology. Patients with severe form of RVH associated with complex cardiac malformations and onset of the symptoms in the neonatal period require prompt intervention and necessitate palliative procedures. In the long term, these patients could need multiple reinterventions. The family physician should be aware of the cardiac origin of isolated symptoms or clinical signs, such as exertional dyspnea or clubbing fingers, and send the patient for pediatric cardiological evaluation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9593115PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.47162/RJME.63.1.04DOI Listing

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