acyanotic congenital heart disease
Congenital
cardiovascular anomalies • Ventricular septal defect - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Down syndrome
• Atrioventricular septal defect - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Atrial septal
defect • Atrial septal defect - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Pulmonary
plethora • Patent ductus arteriosus - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Acyanotic congenital heart disease comprises numerous etiologies, which can be divided into those with increased pulmonary vascularity (pulmonary plethora) and those with normal vascularity:
- increased pulmonary vascularity
- normal pulmonary vascularity
- small shunts (see above)
- aortic valve stenosis
- aortic coarctation
- pulmonary stenosis
Note that certain congenital defects may initially cause acyanotic congenital heart disease and later cyanotic congenital heart disease. Conditions with a left-to-right shunt (e.g. VSD, ASD) may initially be acyanotic but over time can cause maladaptive changes in the right ventricle and pulmonary vasculature, leading to pulmonary hypertension and Eisenmenger syndrome. When this occurs, the shunt is reversed and deoxygenated blood enters the systemic circulation.
Siehe auch:
- Aortenisthmusstenose
- Persistierender Ductus arteriosus
- Atriumseptumdefekt
- Herzfehler
- congenital heart disease - chest x-ray approach
- atrioventricular septal defect (AVSD)
- Normale Herzkonfiguration im Röntgen-Thorax
- Aortenstenose
- Ventrikelseptumdefekt
- Zyanotischer Herzfehler
- Pulmonalstenose
- aneurysm of Valsalva
und weiter:
Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu acyanotic congenital heart disease:
atrioventricular
septal defect (AVSD)