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Cardiology & Current Research

Case Report Volume 10 Issue 2

Defect of Septum Atrio-Ventricular Complete in Newborn. Clinical Evolution Report of a Case

Alicia Santa Cortes González,1 Jennifer del rosario Molina Domínguez,1 Héctor Hugo López Medina2

1Universidad Veracruzana, Servicio de pediatr
2Universidad Veracruzana, Servici

Correspondence: Alicia Santa Cortés González Servicio de Pediatría HGZ No. 11 Mexican Social Insurance Institute "Dr. Ignacio García Téllez "Lomas del Estadio S / N Col. Centro, Xalapa Veracruz, Mexico, Tel 228 8 18-55-55, Fax 61383 O 61334

Received: October 12, 2017 | Published: December 1, 2017

Citation: González ASC Domínguez JDM, Medina HHL (2017) Defect of Septum Atrio-Ventricular Complete in Newborn. Clinical Evolution Report of a Case. J Cardiol Curr Res 10(2): 00358. DOI: 10.15406/jccr.2017.10.00358

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Abstract

Congenital heart disease has an incidence and prevalence ranging from 0.8% to 1%, approximately 7.3 x 1,000 (0.73%) of live births, are the second cause of death in Mexico according to statistics from the National Institute of Statistics and Geography, mortality is related to the type of heart disease, gestational age, weight of the newborn, and the place where the patient is attended at birth. The complete atrio-ventricular septum defect is a rare condition of very high mortality in the first year of life. Its timely diagnosis prevents complications such as hypertension, heart failure and death. We present the clinical evolution of a 6 - month - old male with this heart disease, which, through surgery, separated the systemic and pulmonary circulation, performing anastomosis of the systemic venous return to the pulmonary circulation, presenting surgical complications associated with this congenital malformation.

Keywords: defects of the interventricular septum, congenital heart defects, surgical complications

Introduction

Congenital heart disease is the major cause of congenital malformations at birth. According to different reports, the incidence and prevalence range from 0.8% to 1% of 7.3 x 1,000 (0.73%) of live births.1 The most frequent types of heart disease were prematurity of the ductus arteriosus and prematurity interauricular communication and in those of interventricular communication and interauricular communication, thirdly the persistence of ductus arteriosus.2,3 Causes are unknown in large numbers. Inheritance is a determining factor in 8% of cases, teratogens in 1 to 2% and 90% in multifactorial cases.4

Congenital heart disease is the second leading cause of death in Mexico according to statistics from INEGI (National Institute of Statistics and Geography). Mortality is influenced by the place where the patient is treated and secondly by clinical manifestations at birth such as cyanosis complex heart disease with a less favorable prognosis than the rest of the heart diseases.5,14

Case

A 6-month-old male with a perinatal history of being a product of gestation 1 of a 19-year-old mother from Xalapa Veracruz, who was employed with prenatal control, enrolled in a persistent urinary tract infection after the third month of gestation, denied vaginal infections, threat of abortion, diabetes and hypertension obtained by eutococcal calving qualified with apgar of 8-9, weighing 3050 kg, of 40 weeks of gestation, presented hypothermia in the first three hours of its birth later rejection to the pathway oral, hypoactivity, weak suction and hypoglycemia, peri-oral cyanosis with 55% oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry, physical examination shows a systolic ejection murmur grade II of VI, second intense noise, hospitalized and assessed by pediatric cardiology performing echocardiogram finding single atrium, right single ventricle, with poor po pulmonary artery hypoplasia, unbalanced AV channel, which is sent to the third level of care for diagnostic complementation and specialized treatment, where echocardiography is performed again, reporting a double entry to the left ventricle, a common AV valve , right ventricle double outlet, poorly placed vessels, anterior and left aorta, infundibular and valvular mixed pulmonary stenosis with ring hypoplasia, confluent pulmonary branches, with right branch origin stenosis of 2.1 mm, distal 3 mm, left aortic arch without obstruction with pulse oximetry between 35 and 67% of oxygen saturation was managed with infusion of milrinone, epinephrine and furosemide for a few hours, right systemic pulmonary systemic fistula is performed through thoracotomy dissecting by planes to pleural cavity with dissection of the artery subclavian and right pulmonary artery, were real an anastomosis of gorotex to the right subclavian artery and posteriorly to the right pulmonary artery, during the procedure has significant saturation and decreased heart rate merits advanced resuscitation maneuvers for three minutes on two occasions, after the surgical procedure chest x-ray is performed which shows, levocardia, levoapex, decreased pulmonary flow, visceral heterotaxia, right diaphragmatic paralysis (Figure 1) a pleural tube was placed to reduce the diaphragmatic paralysis, with improvement of ventilation remained in mechanical ventilation for a week, presenting to the extubation again severe respiratory difficulty with over-distension left lung suspected airway injury bronchoscopy is performed being severe tracheoendobronquitis, laryngomalasia degree I, and erosion of the left vocal cord begins treatment with steroid and antibiotic by isolation of germ enterobacter cloacae multiresistent, performs tracheotomy and placement of cannula shiley 4.0, is performed esophagogastroduodenal series to rule out anatomical alterations finding passage of the contrast medium a the trachea with alteration of the phase 2 of the swallowing mechanics with passage to the airway being made fundoplication with gastrostomy with progressive increase of the oral route. A few hours after the first surgical event and once suspended sedation presents subtle convulsive seizures characterized by blinking and sucking, and treatment with phenobarbital is performed. Tomography of the skull is found. Sequelae of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy and right parietal-temporal-occipital cerebral infarction were discharged in stable conditions at 57 days of age. Currently the patient is in the 3th percentile low for his age with acute malnutrition without affectation of the size. With adequate age-specific blood pressure, gastrostomy and tracheotomy with pulse oximetry between 83 and 90%, with a good evolution in pediatric and pediatric cardiology.

Figure 1 Chest X-ray showing right diaphragmatic paralysis.

Discussion

The complete atrioventricular canal defect involves both inferior and superior compartments, the tricuspid and mitral valves are not formed as individual valves. A single ventricle is formed as a rare pathology and with the possibility of surgical treatment by means of palliative surgeries, when it is diagnosed in.6,7 the age and weight of the patient are determinants for their survival, as well as the early diagnosis of the anomaly, in order to avoid complications such as pulmonary hypertension, heart failure and death. that the patient can perform the surgery at an appropriate age, without it worsening his physical condition, for which he is supported with medication and continuous medical care.8-10 In this patient, the symptoms that I present during the first hours of life such as cyanosis and difficulty feeding and the presence of heart murmur made suspicion In the case of complex heart disease, the hospital where this case was analyzed has no hemodynamic or cardiac surgery service, so it had to move urgently with life support and drugs to a third level for its specialized care.

Through surgery they separated the systemic and pulmonary circulation and anastomosis of the systemic venous return to the pulmonary circulation was performed. This surgery is usually achieved in two stages: connection of the superior vena cava to the pulmonary artery around 4-6 months of life (Glenn), to be completed later with connection of the inferior vena cava to the pulmonary circuit around the 4-6 years (Fontan), the quality of life of these patients is acceptably good, although in the long term (3-4 decades) complications can arise, they frequently require reoperations and eventually end up needing heart transplantation.11-13 According to comparative studies in the united states, the single ventricle manifests itself in 5 out of every 100,000 live births, the treatment is of the medical and surgical type which is more a palliative method than correction. With Fontan surgery, it is sought to close all communications between the right and left hemicardium and connect the cavas with the pulmonary arteries.15

During the surgery, the patient presented significant desaturation of oxygen and bradycardia requiring advanced resuscitation maneuvers that conditions hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, with frequent endotracheal intubations injuring the airway with bacterial superinfection by enterobacter cloacae and nosocomial sepsis by multiresistant klebsiella pneumoniae, with tracheotomy, with alterations in the mechanics of swallowing by cerebral hypoxia being meritorious of gastrostomy and treatment with anticonvulsivante for the development of secondary seizures.

Conclusion

The clinical evolution of this patient was determined by the timely detection of the complications presented during the performed surgeries, the clinical manifestations presented at his birth determined the immediate management of his cardiopathy presenting lesions with high surgical mortality during his treatment and high morbidity in the long term. In this work there is no conflict of interest or any kind of financing, informed consent was made in the patient's care.

Acknowledgments

None.

Conflicts of interest

There were no financial interest or conflict of interest.

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