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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: heart disease + congenital heart + heart  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


IBNLive.com
Congenital heart disease: Disease of the innocent
IBNLive.com, India -
About 1 in 100 babies are born with heart defects. Heart disease is enough to scare many of us but imagine being born with a heart condition. In congenital ...

BBC News
Indian Court Rejects Mother's Plea To Abort 26-Week-Old Fetus With ...
AHN -
Nearly 82 percent of babies diagnosed with congenital heart disease survive the first year of life while 78 percent of babies diagnosed with congenital ...
The Bombay High Court's verdict will decide the fate of Niketa ... Times Now.tv
Indian court rejects plea to abort sick fetus The Associated Press
Niketa can't abort: Bombay HC Times of India
IBNLive.com - MSN India
all 188 news articles »
On heart transplant anniversary, Hazlet survivor runs 20 miles
Asbury Park Press, NJ -
Diagnosed with congenital heart disease at age 19, Harmer hung on for 11 years before he needed a donor heart. After a year on the waiting list, ...
Rheumatic fever causes heart disease for children
The New Nation, Bangladesh - Aug 2, 2008
Congenital heart disease (CHD) can present as simple structural heart defects like ASD and VSD (hole in the heart) or PDA (extra connection in the heart) or ...
Heart Walk creates awareness for nation's top killers
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA - Aug 2, 2008
Congenital heart disease is the most common of all birth defects, with about one in eight babies born with some type of heart problem. ...
Endocarditis prophylaxis no longer advised for most cases of ...
Medicexchange, UK - Aug 1, 2008
According to a focused guideline update specific to patients with valvular heart disease, the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart ...

BBC News
Cordelia - a face of hope
BBC News, UK - Jul 26, 2008
Every day around 12 babies are born in the UK with congenital heart disease and many will need specialist care to survive. The BHF has been trying to raise ...
Music to help family of man awaiting heart transplant
The News-Press, FL - Aug 2, 2008
Bob Olive of Cape Coral can relate to victims of heart disease. Due to his congenital heart problems, doctors told his parents he would be lucky to live to ...
Tracleer? (bosentan) receives EU approval for treatment of ...
Ad-Hoc-News (Pressemitteilung), Germany - Aug 3, 2008
... patient populations, such as patients with congenital heart disease (with Eisenmenger syndrome; BREATHE-5) and patients infected with HIV (BREATHE-4). ...VTX:ATLN
Heart transplant gave Craig, 26, his life back
GazetteLive, UK - Aug 2, 2008
Craig was born with congenital heart disease and had a number of operations before he was told he needed a transplant. He had an agonising 10-month wait for ...
Source: Google News

Congenital Heart Disease in 56,109 Births Incidence and Natural History -
SC MITCHELL, SB KORONES, HW BERENDES - Circulation, 1971 - Am Heart Assoc
... Congenital Heart Disease in 56,109 Births Incidence and Natural History.
SC MITCHELL MD, MPH 1 ; SB KORONES MD 1 ; HW BERENDES MD 1 ...

Congenital Heart Disease Caused by Mutations in the Transcription Factor NKX2-5 -
JJ Schott, DW Benson, CT Basson, W Pease, GM … - Science, 1998 - sciencemag.org
... Reports. Congenital Heart Disease Caused by Mutations in the Transcription
Factor NKX2-5. Jean-Jacques Schott, * D. Woodrow Benson ...

Congenital heart disease in a cohort of 19,502 births with long-term follow-up. -
JI Hoffman, R Christianson - Am J Cardiol, 1978 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Am J Cardiol. 1978 Oct;42(4):641-7. Congenital heart disease in a cohort of 19,502
births with long-term follow-up. Hoffman JI, Christianson ...

[BOOK] The clinical recognition of congenital heart disease -
JK Perloff - 1987 - harcourt-international.com
... Quick Search. Order Form. Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease,
5th edition, By Joseph K Perloff, MD, Streisand American ...

Respiratory syncytial viral infection in infants with congenital heart disease.
NE MacDonald, CB Hall, SC Suffin, C Alexson, PJ … - N Engl J Med, 1982 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Respiratory syncytial viral infection in infants with congenital heart disease.
MacDonald NE, Hall CB, Suffin SC, Alexson C, Harris PJ, Manning JA. ...

Inhaled nitric oxide in congenital heart disease -
JD Roberts, P Lang, LM Bigatello, GJ Vlahakes, WM … - Circulation, 1993 - Am Heart Assoc
Circulation, Vol 87, 447-453, Copyright ? 1993 by American Heart Association.
ARTICLES. Inhaled nitric oxide in congenital heart disease. ...

CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE: PREVALENCE AT LIVEBIRTH THE BALTIMORE-WASHINGTON INFANT STUDY -
C FERENCZ, JD RUBIN, RJ MCCARTER, JI BRENNER, CA … - American Journal of Epidemiology, 1985 - Oxford Univ Press
... Congenital heart disease: prevalence at livebirth. ... The Baltimore-Washington Infant
Study is a regional epidemiologic study of congenital heart disease. ...

Prospective diagnosis of 1,006 consecutive cases of congenital heart disease in the fetus -
LD Allan, GK Sharland, A Milburn, SM Lockhart, AM … - Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 1994 - Am Coll Cardio Found
... Prospective diagnosis of 1,006 consecutive cases of congenital heart disease
in the fetus. LD Allan, GK Sharland, A Milburn, SM Lockhart ...

CONGENITAL DEAF-MUTISM, FUNCTIONAL HEART DISEASE WITH PROLONGATION OF THE QT INTERVAL, AND SUDDEN … -
A Jervell, FL Nielsen - Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology, 1999 - Blackwell Synergy
... CONGENITAL DEAF-MUTISM, FUNCTIONAL HEART DISEASE WITH PROLONGATION OF THE QT INTERVAL,
AND SUDDEN DEATH ANTON JERVELL, MD, AND FRED raANGE-NIEISEh?, MD ...

Congenital Heart Disease in Adults-First of Two Parts -
ME Brickner, LD Hillis, RA Lange - New England Journal of Medicine, 2000 - content.nejm.org
... Next Next. Congenital Heart Disease in Adults? First of Two Parts. M. Elizabeth
Brickner, MD, L. David Hillis, MD, and Richard A. Lange, MD. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Congenital Heart Disease

Congenital heart diseases are defects in the heart and major blood vessels that are present at birth and occur at various stages of fetal development. About one out of every 120 live-born babies is born with a congenital heart defect.

Symptoms of Congenital Heart Disease

Signs of a congenital heart disorder include:

  • Heart murmurs (abnormal beating of the heart) of different types, depending on location and the nature of the disorder
  • Symptoms of heart failure, including increased breathing rate, difficulty breathing, a rapid heartbeat
  • "Blue baby" syndrome, in which the skin turns bluish or purplish from lack of oxygen
  • Clubfoot or the enlargement of the fingers and toes with an overhanging nail
  • An abnormal increase of circulating red blood cells
  • Enlargement of the liver

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  • A pulse that is hard to hear or no pulse
  • Cold hands and feet
  • Signs of organ failure, including low urine output or kidney failure
  • Enlargement of the chambers of the heart resulting from the need to work harder to overcome the defect

Causes of Congenital Heart Disease and Risk Factors

Some congenital heart disorders are caused by genes. Some defects traced to abnormal chromosomes may cause severe heart defects while others result in less severe problems.

Others may result from an illness of the mother, such as diabetes (insulin production problems) or rubella (a form of measles), exposure to certain drugs or alcohol, fetal alcohol syndrome or combinations of all of these.

If an unborn child has an immediate relative (a sibling or parent) who had a congenital heart disease, he or she has a two to three percent risk of being born with a congenital heart disease. The risk increases if the relative was a parent.

Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease

Diagnosis of a congenital heart defect is based on finding that the heart is not working properly as indicated by the symptoms above. After taking a medical history, a physician will perform a physical examination, an electrocardiogram (measures electrical action of the heart) and a chest X-ray. These are usually enough to find a defect.

Other tests may be done, such as:

  • Echocardiography (ultrasound to check how well the heart is operating)
  • Cardiac catheterization (inserting a tube into the heart)
  • Angiocardiography (injecting a special substance to allow viewing of the heart and blood vessels)
  • Other laboratory studies may be needed to confirm that there is a congenital heart disorder and how severe it is

If a baby is born with bluish or purplish skin from lack of oxygen, a thorough search for causes other than congenital heart defects will be made as well. This condition is often a result of respiratory problems, including blockages in the air passages of the lung, the presence of large masses where the lung should be or a disease that prevents oxygen getting to the blood. Additional causes may include an abnormally low body temperature, low blood sugar, disorders of the central nervous system, a lack of calcium in the blood or an infection.

Specific congenital heart defects:

  • Aortic valve stenosis. This is when the opening of the valve (movable part that allows blood to flow) of the aorta is narrowed because of problems with the valve. This type of defect makes up about five percent of all diagnosed heart defects. Because this defect is often not discovered, it may likely be the most common heart defect.
  • Atrial septal defect, which is about six to 10 percent of congenital heart disease. This is a hole in the wall that separates two arteries.
  • Coarctation of the aorta, which is a narrowing of the interior space of the aorta in a localized area. This accounts for seven to eight percent of congenital heart defects.
  • Complete or partial artrioventricular canal defect. In this defect, there is a hole in the wall that separates either the atrial chambers of the heart or the ventricles at the level of the valves. It makes up about five percent of congenital heart disease. It usually is accompanied by abnormalities in the mitral or tricuspid valve.
  • Patent ductus arteriosus. In a developing fetus, a duct connects the pulmonary (lung) artery with the aorta. It takes blood directly from the right chamber of the heart to the aorta, bypassing the lungs. This is possible because the fetus is receiving oxygen from its mother's blood circulation. About the time a baby is born, this duct closes because the baby will breathe using its own lungs at birth. If the duct doesn't close, this defect occurs. As many as 80% of infants who are born two or more months early have this condition.
  • Persistent truncus arteriosis. This is a defect in which a single vessel does not divide to form the aorta and the artery that leads to the lungs in a developing fetus. As a result, the arteries that go to the lungs branch off from the aorta instead of coming from the right ventricle of the heart.
  • Pulmonic valve stenosis. This is an abnormality of the pulmonary (lung) valve, which limits the size of the opening of the valve. Pulmonic stenosis (narrowing) of varying degrees constitutes about 10 percent of congenital heart disease.
  • Tetralogy of Fallot, a defect in which there is a blockage out of the right chamber and defect in the wall between the chambers.
  • Transposition of the great arteries. This is a defect where the aorta comes directly from the right ventricle and the artery to the lungs comes from the left ventricle. This is the opposite of a normal heart. As a result, the body doesn't get enough oxygen. This condition accounts for five to seven percent of all congenital heart defects.
  • Underdeveloped left ventricle syndrome
  • Ventricular septal defect, in which there are one or more openings in the wall separating the ventricles of the heart. They may close up on their own in infancy or they may require surgery to close. They may also lead to heart failure or be accompanied by disease in the blood vessels of the lungs.
 
 
 
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