ebook img

Perloff’s Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease: Expert Consult - Online and Print, 6e PDF

565 Pages·2012·129.42 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Perloff’s Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease: Expert Consult - Online and Print, 6e

1600JohnF.KennedyBlvd. Ste1800 Philadelphia,PA19103-2899 CLINICALRECOGNITIONOFCONGENITALHEARTDISEASE ISBN:978-1-4377-1618-4 Copyright#2012,2003,1994,1987,1978,1970bySaunders,animprintofElsevierInc. Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproducedortransmittedinanyformorbyanymeans,electronicor mechanical,includingphotocopying,recording,oranyinformationstorageandretrievalsystem,without permissioninwritingfromthepublisher.Detailsonhowtoseekpermission,furtherinformationabout thePublisher’spermissionspoliciesandourarrangementswithorganizationssuchastheCopyright ClearanceCenterandtheCopyrightLicensingAgency,canbefoundatourwebsite:www.elsevier.com/ permissions. ThisbookandtheindividualcontributionscontainedinitareprotectedundercopyrightbythePublisher (otherthanasmaybenotedherein). Notices Knowledgeandbestpracticeinthisfieldareconstantlychanging.Asnewresearchandexperience broadenourunderstanding,changesinresearchmethods,professionalpractices,ormedicaltreatment maybecomenecessary. Practitionersandresearchersmustalwaysrelyontheirownexperienceandknowledgeinevaluating andusinganyinformation,methods,compounds,orexperimentsdescribedherein.Inusingsuch informationormethodstheyshouldbemindfuloftheirownsafetyandthesafetyofothers,including partiesforwhomtheyhaveaprofessionalresponsibility. Withrespecttoanydrugorpharmaceuticalproductsidentified,readersareadvisedtocheckthemost currentinformationprovided(i)onproceduresfeaturedor(ii)bythemanufacturerofeachproductto beadministered,toverifytherecommendeddoseorformula,themethodanddurationof administration,andcontraindications.Itistheresponsibilityofpractitioners,relyingontheirown experienceandknowledgeoftheirpatients,tomakediagnoses,todeterminedosagesandthebest treatmentforeachindividualpatient,andtotakeallappropriatesafetyprecautions. Tothefullestextentofthelaw,neitherthePublishernortheauthors,contributors,oreditorsassume anyliabilityforanyinjuryand/ordamagetopersonsorpropertyasamatterofproductsliability, negligenceorotherwise,orfromanyuseoroperationofanymethods,products,instructions,orideas containedinthematerialherein. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Perloff,JosephK.,1924- Clinicalrecognitionofcongenitalheartdisease/JosephK.Perloff,ArianeJ. Marelli.–6thed. p.;cm. ISBN978-1-4377-1618-4(hardcover:alk.paper) I.Marelli,Ariane.J.II.Title. [DNLM:1.HeartDefects,Congenital–diagnosis.WG220] 616.102043–dc23 2011032130 ExecutiveContentStrategist:DoloresMeloni ContentDevelopmentSpecialist:JulieMirra PublishingServicesManager:AnneAltepeter ProjectManager:CindyThoms DesignDirection:EllenZanolle PrintedinChina Lastdigitistheprintnumber: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 In memory of my parents, Rose and Richard, and with high hopes for Alexandra, Benjamin, and Nicholas Joseph K. Perloff To students past and future, whose privilege it has been and will be to learn from Joseph K. Perloff Ariane J. Marelli PERLOFF’S Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease PERLOFF’S Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease Sixth Edition Joseph K. Perloff, MD Emeritus Streisand American Heart Association Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics Ahmanson/UCLA Adult Congenital Heart Disease Center University of California–Los Angeles School of Medicine Los Angeles, California Ariane J. Marelli, MD, FRCP(C), MPH Associate Professor of Medicine Director, McGill Adult Unit for Congenital Heart Disease McGill University Montreal, Quebec Canada Preface TheobjectivesetforthinthefirstfiveeditionsofClinicalRecognitionofCongenital Heart Disease remains the same: to stimulate clinicians to use the basic diagnostic toolsattheirdisposal,thehistory,physicalexamination,electrocardiogram,andchest x-ray. When the second edition was published, two-dimensional echocardiography was in its infancy, but it is now virtually routine. Cardiac catheterization and angi- ography were major steps forward, followed by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography. Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography provide exquisiteanatomic detail and refinedphysiologic information. Inlightoftheseadvances,andwithmoreintheoffing,emphasisonbasicdiagnostic toolsismorerelevantthanever.Intelligentselectionfromtheincreasingarrayofcur- rently available procedures requires far more sophisticated judgment than when the choiceswerelimited.Thebasictoolsprovidethebasisforthisjudgment.Thebedside diagnosisofcongenitalheartdiseaseisaclinicalsyllogism,anexcitingdisciplineinlog- ical thinking, and a gratifying source of self-education. Joseph K.Perloff LosAngeles, California Ariane J. Marelli Montreal, Quebec,Canada Acknowledgments The Ahmanson Foundation generously supported the preparation of this edition. Natasha Andjelkovic, our editor at Elsevier, was exemplary. A collaboration of pediatric cardiology colleagues at UCLA and McGill fostered an atmosphere of interchange that made congenital heart disease a continuum from the fetus to the extended ages that survival now permits. The scholarly integrity and academic achievements of Marjorie Gabrielle Perloff, PhD, Professor Emerita,Stanford University, determined my standards. Joseph K.Perloff LosAngeles, California It is a privilege to have stood on the shoulders of giants at UCLA, including Joseph Perloff, John Child, Pamela Miner, Hillel Laks, and Roberta Williams. The legacy of knowledge, compassion, and vision drives me to this day. I am grateful to have theopportunity to participate in the lifeof this singular book. IthankDr.LucJutras,forhiscreativityasexemplifiedbythemagneticresonance imagingoftheHolmesheartincludedinthisedition.Thenumerousfellowswehave thepleasureofworkingwithstimulateourimaginations.Amongthese,Dr.BorisLowe ofNewZealandandDr.NorikoKitamuraofJapanparticipatedinthepreparationof theimagesincludedin this edition. Theintellectualcuriosity,substance,andstabilitythatmyhusband,JulianFalutz, andourchildren,JacobandRebecca,havegiventoeachofourendeavorsenablemein my efforts daily.Forthis, I can never be thankful enough. Ariane J. Marelli Montreal, Quebec,Canada C h a p t e r 1 Introduction: Formulation of the Problem “The heart is theyoungest, most diverse, mostfluid, dysplasia. Still other abnormalities, such as Marfan syn- most changeable, most versatile partof creation.” drome,whichistheresultofmutationsinthegenethat Goethe1 encodesfibrillin-1,areactuallyorpotentiallyoffunctional significance but are not necessarily manifest at birth as Congenitalheartdisease(con,together;genitus,born)is gross structural malformations and, as a matter of con- oftenviewedasagroupofgrossstructuralabnormalities vention, are usually not classified as congenital.14 And a thatarepresentatbirth.Althoughnotincorrect,thisdef- handful of odd defects tend to escape inclusion, such as inition requireselaboration and qualification. congenitalkinkingoftheinternalcarotidartery.15 Prenatal diagnoses have been possible for more than Because of the intimate interplay between congenital 25years.2Ataboutembryonicday20inthehumanfetus, malformations of the heart and the fetal substrate, we progenitor cells within the mesoderm become commit- now turn to the fetal circulation per se and the remark- ted to a cardiogenic destination.3 Most malformations able circulatory changes that occur at birth.4,16 In utero compatiblewith6monthsofintrauterinelifepermitlive patterns of blood flow have been defined in fetal lambs offspringatterm.Agivenmalformationmayexistinrel- afterinsertionofcathetersintolimbvessels,4andinutero ativeharmonywiththefetalcirculation,onlytobemod- left and right ventricular outputs and flow distributions ified considerably, at least physiologically, by dramatic throughtheforamenovale,ductusarteriosus,andpulmo- circulatory changes at birth.4 Weeks, months, or years narybedhavebeenmeasuredinhumanfetuseswithhigh- maythenelapsebeforeananomalyrevealsitselfaschar- resolution color Doppler ultrasound scan.16,17 The right acteristic or typical. A functionally normal aortic valve and left ventricles do not function in series in the fetus that is congenitally bicuspid at birth may take decades asthey doin the extrauterine circulation. Gas exchange to fibrose, calcify, and present as overt aortic stenosis. occursintheplacenta,notinthelungs.Abouttwothirds Conversely,amalformationmaydisappear,asisthecase oftherightventricularoutputisdivertedawayfromthe with spontaneous closureof aventricular septaldefect. lungs through a widely patentductus arteriosusintothe Congenitalmalformationsoftheheartandcirculation descending thoracic aorta, from which a large portion are not fixed anatomic defects that appear at birth but enters the umbilical circulation for oxygenation in the instead are anomalies in flux that originate in the early placenta. Pulmonary blood flow is low but meets nutri- embryo, evolve during gestation, survive the dramatic tionalrequirementsforgrowthofthelungs.Inferiorvena circulatory alterations at birth, and change considerably cavablood,whichisacompositefromtheumbilicalvein, during the course of extrauterine life. Congenital heart theleft andright hepatic veins,theductusvenosus, and disease was once the exclusive and legitimate domain the distal inferior vena cava, streams in the direction of of pediatrics, but survival patterns have changed appre- the foramen ovale into the left atrium and then into ciably.5,6 In the United States today, there are more theleftventricle,assistedbytheeustachianvalve.About adultswithcongenitalheartdiseasethanthereareinfants 60%oftheumbilicalvenousreturnthatisoxygenatedin and children; these new generations of patients are best theplacentabypassestheliverthroughtheductusveno- caredforbyspeciallytrainedcardiologists.7Clinicalpre- sus and enters the inferior vena cava and right atrium. sentations, especially in adults,8,9 can be exceptionally Blood from the superior vena cava is deflected within complex.10–12 therightatriumtowardthetricuspidvalve,acrosswhich Furthermore,certaindefectsthatareactuallyorpoten- itreachestherightventricle.About70%oftherelatively tiallyoffunctionalsignificancearenotgrossstructurally, oxygen-rich blood ejected from the left ventricle is such as congenital complete heart block, either isolated distributedtothecoronarycirculation(andthusthemyo- (seeChapter4)orwithcongenitallycorrectedtransposi- cardium),totheheadandneck(andthusthebrain),andto tionofthegreatarteries(seeChapter6)orleftisomerism theforelimbs.Almost90%oftherelativelyoxygen-poor (see Chapter 3); Wolff-Parkinson-White preexcitation, blood ejected by the right ventricle passes through the eitherisolatedorcomplicated(seeChapter13);absence ductusarteriosusintothedescendingaortatobeoxygen- ofasinusnode,aswithasuperiorvenacavalsinusvenosus atedintheplacenta.Accordingly,thefetalcirculationis atrial septal defect (see Chapter 15) or left isomerism designedsothatbloodwithhigheroxygensaturationpref- (see Chapter 3); ventricular tachycardia with the long erentiallyreachesthemyocardiumandbrainandlesssat- QT syndromes13; or arrhythmogenic right ventricular uratedbloodpreferentiallyreachestheplacenta. 1 2 Chapter 1 Introduction:FormulationoftheProblem The profound circulatory changes at birth occur methodofassessmentusedintheprocessofclinicalrec- almost simultaneously. The umbilical/placental circula- ognitionisasyllogismofappliedlogic.Whenconclusions tioniseliminated,thelungsexpand,rhythmicventilation are drawn from accurate observations,correct diagnoses commences,oxygentensionrisesasalveolarfluidiselim- emergewithgratifyingfrequency,evenwhenthemalfor- inated and ambient air is breathed, pulmonary vascular mationsarecomplex.Logicisencouraged;memorization resistancefalls,andpulmonarybloodflowincreaseseight is minimized. In each chapter, the gross morphology to10fold.Venousreturntotheleftatriumincreases,left is first established to shed light on the physiologic de- atrialpressurerises,thevalveoftheforamenovalecloses, rangements. The question is then asked: What clinical andtheductusarteriosusfunctionallycloses(constricts) manifestations might result from these anatomic and within hours after birth, effectively separating the pul- physiologicderangements?Thestageisnowsetforclin- monary and systemic circulations.4 icalrecognition—thethesisofthisbook—whichdepends A number of important delayed events complete the onasynthesisofinformationfromthehistory,thephysical transitionfromthefetaltothematuringcirculationafter examination,theelectrocardiogram,andthechestx-ray. birth.Duringthecourseofgestation,pulmonaryvascular Contemporary imaging techniques serve as important resistance falls progressively as new resistance arterioles supplements. develop. Regulation of the perinatal pulmonary circula- The history, which is an interview, is designed to tionreflectsacomplexinterplaybetweenvasoconstrictor secure background information. The physical examina- and vasodilator factors, but the net effect is a dramatic tion includes physical appearance, arterial pulse, jugular increase in pulmonary blood flow initiated by expansion venous pulse,precordial percussion, movement and pal- ofthelungsandrhythmicventilationthatreflectsashift pation,andauscultation.18Thestethoscopeistheoldest from active pulmonary vasoconstriction in the fetus to cardiovasculardiagnosticinstrumentincontinuousclini- active vasodilation in the neonate.4 Failure of this shift cal use. The electrocardiogram, developed in 1903 by to occur results in persistent fetal circulation of the Willem Einthoven, when read closely and interpreted newborn. Thick-walled fetal pulmonary arterioles are inclinicalcontext,providesgratifyingdiagnosticinsights, designedtomeetthefullforceofsystemicrightventric- even in complex congenital heart disease.19 Meticulous ularpressuretheinstantthelungsexpand.Asrespiration attentionshouldbedevotedtothePwave,thePduration, commences, a marked increase in alveolar and systemic thePRinterval,theQRS,theQTinterval,andtheTwave. arterialoxygentensionoccurs,towhichpulmonaryarte- Theelectrocardiographicwavesarethoughttohavebeen riolesare exquisitelysensitive,settingthestagefordila- so-named by Rene Descartes, an 18th century French tionandinvolution. Largepulmonaryarteriesalso playa philosopher and scientist20 who was surely known to role,althoughmuchlesser,indeterminationofthetotal Einthoven.Thex-raywasdevelopedin1895byWilhelm drop in pressure across thelungs. KonradRoentgen.Chestx-raysmustbereadcloselyand Maturational changes have an impact on the neonatal interpretedinclinicalcontext.Posteroanteriorandlateral disparityinsizebetweenthemainandbranchpulmonary views should be read according to a planned sequence: arteries and on the angulation at the origins of the right namely, penetration, rotation, degree of inhalation, age and left pulmonary arterial branches (see Chapter 11). and sex, right/left orientation, thoracic and abdominal Both of these factors are responsible for a physiologic situs, positions and malpositions above and below the dropinpressuredistaltothepulmonarytrunk.Another diaphragm,thebones,extrapulmonarysofttissuedensi- important change relates to the fetal right ventricle, ties,vascularandparenchymalintrapulmonarysofttissue which slowly loses its relative mass. With the stimulus densities,thegreatarteriesandgreatveins,theatria,and of afterload eliminated, a gradual reduction is seen in theventricles.Muchcanbesaidforlearninginterpretation rightventricularwallthicknessrelativetotheventricular by reading chest x-rays with a trained chest radiologist. septum and left ventricle. The neonatal right ventricle As with the electrocardiogram, so too with the chest doesnotundergoregressionbutinsteaddoesnotincrease x-ray—theamount ofinformationthatcanbeextracted its mass as rapidly as the left ventricle. Normal physio- isgratifying,evenincomplexcongenitalheartdisease. logic adaptations at birth are remarkable in their own Itisaxiomaticthatemphasisshouldbeplacedonthe right. Therefore, that congenital malformations of the relationshipofthepartstothewhole,arelationshipthat heartorcirculationwill,tovaryingdegrees,interactwith results in a harmonious picture devoid of contradictions and be modified byextrauterine life isnot surprising. rather than a collection of loosely related observations. “Oneofthemostwondrousfeaturesofanimatenature Maximum information should be extracted from each must surely be the perfect harmony existing between source while information from one source is related to structure and function.”17 No organ system exemplifies that of another. Each step should advance our thinking this harmony as well as the heart and circulation. In the and narrow the diagnostic possibilities. By the end of presence of congenital heart disease, both the morphol- the clinical assessment, untenable considerations should ogyandthephysiologyoftheheartandcirculationchange have been discarded, possibilities retained for further withthepassageoftimefromthefetustotheneonateto consideration, and probabilities brought into sharper the infant, to the child, to the adolescent, and to the focus. The process reflects Herophilus’ adage that the adult. Some of these changes result in neonatal death, bestphysicianisonewhodistinguishesbetweenthepos- and others express themselves gradually over weeks, sible and theimpossible. months, years, or even decades. The clinical manifesta- A diagnostic impression, once entertained, unneces- tions of congenital heart disease are dealt with herein sarily influences the objectivity with which subsequent in terms of anatomic and physiologic mechanisms. The impressions are appraised. If the same sequence of 3 Chapter 1 Introduction:FormulationoftheProblem clinical evaluation isalwaysused,thelatterstepscannot provides theinformationnecessaryfor mostofthesedeci- beobjectivelyassessed.Varyingthesequencewithwhich sions. With increasing emphasis on the cost of medical information is assembled is therefore useful. Begin, for care, a resurgence of interest in the inexpensive and safe example,withthechestx-rayorelectrocardiogram.With clinical examinationis likely.25 infants,thepracticalapproachoftenistotakeadvantage oftemporaryperiodsofcalmandstartwiththephysical examination,whichmayshortly bedifficulttoperform. SOME ADDITIONAL POINTS It is not the sequence that matters, but the depth and synthesis of analysis. Irrespective of how the order of information is arranged, two questions must always be The term natural history is not used. Julien Hoffman’s asked: How does one step relate to the next? How do definitionisrelevant:“Thenaturalhistoryofanydisease thepartsrelatetothe whole? isa description of what happens to people with the dis- Diagnosticthinkingbenefitsfromtheuseofanticipa- easewhodonotreceivetreatmentforit.”26Naturalhis- tion and supposition. After conclusions are drawn from tory is therefore not synonymous with unoperated, and thehistory,itisusefultopauseandask:Iftheseassump- unnaturalhistoryisnotsynonymouswithpostoperative. tionsarecorrect,whatcanIanticipatefromthephysical Nonsurgicaltherapeuticinterventionscanhardlybecon- examination? Or what specific points can I anticipate in siderednatural.Asecondpoint:differentialdiagnosesare the electrocardiogram or x-ray to support or refute my notused.Instead,eachchapterendswithasummarythat initial impressions? Anticipation heightens interest as permits clinical recognition of the congenital anomaly the clinical assessment progresses. Confirmation comes coveredinthechapter. Thesesummariesbringtogether as a source of satisfaction, and error stands out in bold clinicalhighlightsandserveasremindersforthereader’s relief.Norshouldwebeafraidofmistakes.Truthemerges convenience. sooner from error thanfromconfusion. Finally,acommentonterminologyisneeded.TheFirst Decadesago,PaulWoodproposedthatweanswerfive International Summit on Nomenclature for Congenital clinicalquestions(Box1-1).Whenapproachedaccording Heart Disease was held in 2001 in Toronto and ended to this proposal, the clinical recognition of congenital with virtually unanimous support for the development heartdiseasebecomesastimulatingchallenge,asatisfying ofaunifiedsystemfordescribingcongenialcardiacmal- disciplineinlogicalthinking,andaconstantsourceofself formations.27Thetermsusedhereintodescribecongen- education.Theintensityofenquiryandtheanalyticstan- ital malformations of the heart and circulation include dardsusedatthebedsideshouldbethesameasthosein older Latinized forms and more recent Anglicized diagnostic laboratories. forms.28–30 The vocabulary of congenital heart disease The Preface to the first edition stated, “I hope isrepletewithabbreviationsunderstoodonlybytheini- to stimulate clinicians to use the basic tools readily at tiated. Accordingly, when abbreviations are used, they their disposal—the history, the physical examination, are first defined for the reader’s convenience, but full theelectrocardiogram,andthechestx-ray.”ThePreface terms are subsequently used. New terms are not used tothethirdeditionstated,“Two-dimensionalechocardi- when old terms suffice. Acronyms areavoided. ography was in its infancy when the second edition I have tried to ensure that the material in this book appeared, but now is a routine laboratory procedure.” is accessible to a broad audience. The terminology was Cardiac catheterization and angiography were followed assiduously addressed and based on decades of personal by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography, experience. My objective remains to excite interest and and magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance tobe understood. angiography, and computed tomography now provide exquisite anatomic detail and refined physiologic infor- REFERENCES mation.21–24 Given these advanced imaging techniques, and with 1. WilliamsJR.ThelifeofGoethe.Oxford:BlackwellPublishers;1998. moreintheoffing,hasemphasisonthehistory,physical 2. AllanL.Prenataldiagnosisofstructuralcardiacdefects.AmJMed GenetCSeminMedGenet.2007;145C:73–76. examination, electrocardiogram, chest x-ray, and echo- 3. Olson EN, Srivastava D. Molecular pathways controlling heart cardiogram become irrelevant? Intelligent selection of in- development.Science.1996;272:671–676. vestigative procedures from an ever-increasing array 4. MollerJH,HoffmanJIE,eds.Pediatriccardiovascularmedicine. requires far more sophisticated decision making than NewYork:ChurchillLivingstone;2000. 5. MarelliAJ,MackieAS,Ionescu-IttuR,RahmeE,PiloteL.Congen- wasnecessarywhenchoiceswerelimitedtotheelectrocar- italheartdiseaseinthegeneralpopulation:changingprevalenceand diogram and chest x-ray. The basic clinical assessment agedistribution.Circulation.2007;115:163–172. 6. KhairyP,Ionescu-IttuR,MackieAS,AbrahamowiczM,PiloteL, Marelli AJ. Changing mortality in congenital heart disease. J Am BOX1-1 FIVEBASICQUESTIONS CollCardiol.2010;56:1149–1157. 7. ChildJS,FreedMD,MavroudisC,MoodieDS,TuckerAL.Task 1. Isthepatient’sconditionacyanoticorcyanotic? force9:traininginthecareofadultpatientswithcongenitalheart 2. Ispulmonaryarterialbloodflowincreased? disease.JAmCollCardiol.2008;51:389–393. 8. SommerRJ,HijaziZM,RhodesJrJF.Pathophysiologyofcongenital 3. Doesthemalformationoriginateintheleftorthe heartdiseaseintheadult:partI:shuntlesions.Circulation.2008; rightsideoftheheart? 117:1090–1099. 4. Whichisthedominantventricle? 9. RhodesJF,HijaziZM,SommerRJ.Pathophysiologyofcongenital 5. Ispulmonaryhypertensionpresent? heart disease in the adult, part II. Simple obstructive lesions. Circulation.2008;117:1228–1237.

Description:
Dr. Joseph Perloff is joined by Dr. Ariane Marelli to bring you a new edition of Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease. This medical reference book covers the full spectrum of CHD, from infants through adults, allowing you to effectively detect these conditions as early as possible. Be at
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.