Publication | Open Access
Natural history of ventricular septal defect. A study involving 790 cases.
140
Citations
14
References
1977
Year
Heart FailureStructural Heart DiseaseCardiovascular DiseaseAtherosclerosisVsd TypeVentricular Septal DefectNatural HistorySepsisValve DiseaseUntreated PatientsCongenital Heart DefectValvular Heart DiseasePublic HealthMedicineConstrictive PericarditisCardiologyEmergency MedicineCardiothoracic Surgery
The development of 790 untreated patients affected by ventricular septal defect (VSD) has been the object of a 25-year study. Of these patients, 72% had had at least one catheterization; 13% had several. The mean observation interval is six years, and the average age at the latest data is 19.5 years. This study covers 4717 patient-years. For the entire population, the incidence rate or aortic regurgitation is 6.3% (4.3 for 1000 patient-years) and that of bacterial endocarditis is 3.7% (2.4 for 1000 patient-years). Twenty-five patients died, 15 of them between the ages of one and 39. Of the 499 cases with several clinical examinations, 71% remained stable. In 21%, changes suggesting some level of closure developed; in 7%, infundibular stenosis began to evolve and in 1% pulmonary vascular disease began to appear or became accentuated. These different rates are studied and discussed in relation to patients' age, VSD type, and various follow-up characteristics.
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