Publication | Open Access
Ventricular Septal Defect with Aortic Regurgitation
159
Citations
10
References
1964
Year
Heart FailureCardiovascular DiseaseRight VentricularMedicineVentricular Septal DefectValve DiseaseCongenital Heart DefectValvular Heart DiseasePublic HealthWide Pulse PressureCongenital Heart AnomalyCardiologyAnesthesiology
Thirty-four patients with ventricular septal defect and aortic regurgitation, representing less than 5 per cent of our patients with ventricular septal defect, are discussed. A loud, systolic murmur, characteristic of ventricular septal defect, is noted during infancy, whereas evidences of aortic regurgitation (protodiastolic murmur and wide pulse pressure) does not usually appear until sometime between 2 and 10 years of age. Clinical and catheterization data indicate that the principal hemodynamic load is aortic regurgitation, whereas the ventricular septal defect does not usually result in a large pulmonary blood flow or high pulmonary arterial pressure. In about 50 per cent of the patients, a significant pressure gradient across the right ventricular outflow tract exists. Detailed pathologic studies indicate that the ventricular septal defects are high and anterior and encroach to a greater or lesser degree on the membranous bulbar septum. The right coronary cusp is the one most severely involved, and, by its prolapse, causes aortic regurgitation; the noncoronary cusp is always less severely affected. The anatomic basis of the pressure gradient observed across the right ventricular outflow tract is not always clear.
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