Patent Ductus Arteriosus

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Introduction

Patent ductus arteriosus is a congenital heart problem whereby the normal vessel connecting the fetal pulmonary artery and aorta remains open. This results in a a shunt in which blood passes from the high pressure aorta to the pulmonary artery, to the lungs, and back to the left heart.

 

PDAs have an overall incidence of 1:2500 to 5000 live births.

They are more common in premature infants, who may not have responsiveness to vasoconstrictive actions.

 

The Case of...

a simple case introducing clincial presentation and calling for a differential diagnosis to get students thinking.

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Causes and Risk Factors

Risk factors include first trimester rubella infection, prematurity, and birth at a high altitude.

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Pathophysiology

Large left-to-right shunts can develop early congestive heart failure.

Eisenmenger syndrome can result in cyanosis and clubbing as deoxygenated blood is shunted to the aorta.

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Signs and Symptoms

  • history
  • physical exam

History

Children with small PDAs are generally asymptomatic.

Poor feeding (sweaty, etc)

Recurrent lower RTIs

Slow growth and failure to thrive

Fatigue, dyspnea, and palpitations can occur in adolescence or adulthood with moderate-sized vessels.

Physical Exam

appearance: may have proximal muscle wasting doe to failure to thrive

resp: increased work of breathing

hepatomegaly

cardiovascular

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Investigations

ECG: Atrial fibrillation may occur due to left atrial dilation.

A chest X ray shows an enlarged cardiac silouhette due to left heart enlargement, with prominent pulmonary vascular markings. Calcification of the ductus may be present.

ECG shows left atrial enlargement and left ventricular hypertrophy.

Echocardiography allows visualization of the ductus and can be used to estimate flow and pressures.

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Differential Diagnosis

 

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Treatments

 

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Consequences and Course

Most common cause of heart failure in children.

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Resources and References

 

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Topic Development

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