Cardiac disease in pregnancy and congenital heart disease

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Cardiac disease in pregnancy Microchapters

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Overview

Pathophysiology

Epidemiology and Demographics

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

History and Symptoms

Physical Examination

Electrocardiogram

Exercise Testing

Radiation Exposure

Chest X Ray

Echocardiography

MRI

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Catheterization:

Pulmonary artery catheterization
Cardiac catheterization
Cardiac Ablation

Treatment

Cardiovascular Drugs in Pregnancy

Labor and delivery

Resuscitation in Late Pregnancy

Contraindications to pregnancy

Special Scenarios:

I. Pre-existing Cardiac Disease:
Congenital Heart Disease
Repaired Congenital Heart Disease
Pulmonary Hypertension
Rheumatic Heart Disease
Connective Tissue Disorders
II. Valvular Heart Disease:
Mitral Stenosis
Mitral Regurgitation
Aortic Insufficiency
Aortic Stenosis
Mechanical Prosthetic Valves
Tissue Prosthetic Valves
III. Cardiomyopathy:
Dilated Cardiomyopathy
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Peripartum Cardiomyopathy
IV. Cardiac diseases that may develop During Pregnancy:
Arrhythmias
Acute Myocardial Infarction
Hypertension

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-In-Chief: Cafer Zorkun, M.D., Ph.D. [2]

Overview

  • Rapidly becoming most common cardiac problem among pregnant patients
    • Improved diagnostic techniques
    • Availability of corrective surgery
  • Children of affected mothers at increased risk of having similar lesions
  • Outcomes clearly linked to functional status pre-pregnancy

Classification of disease

Can classify lesions into 3 classes:

I. Volume Overload (L → R shunt)

  • Maternal and fetal mortality ≥50%
  • Consider termination if detected early
  • Careful medical management
-Supplemental O2 during pregnancy
-Hospitalization at 20 weeks gestation
-Prompt treatment of CHF
-Avoid shifts in preload/afterload

II. Pressure Overload

  • Degree of obstruction determines outcome
  • Gradient >80 mm Hg mandates correction
  • Accounts for 9% of all congenital disease in adults
  • Class I or II patients usually do well
  • Overall 3.5% mortality in unoperated patients (aortic dissection/rupture, CVA, CHF, endocarditis)
  • HTN needs careful management
  • Avoid Valsalva
  • Encourage left lateral decubitus position
  • Maximum risk period during delivery when blood loss can result in increased gradient + systemic hypotension

III. Cyanotic Heart Disease (R → L shunt)

  • Poor prognosticators:[1]
  • O2 sat<85%
  • Livebirth 12% vs. 92% is sat >90%
  • Systemic right ventricular pressures

References

  1. Presbitero P. et al. Circulation 1994;89:2673-6.


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