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Successful Treatment of Fetal Congestive Heart Failure Secondary to Tachycardia
94
Citations
12
References
1981
Year
Heart FailureStructural Heart DiseaseSuccessful TreatmentPediatricsFetal Cardiac ArrhythmiaMaternal HealthContinuous Electronic MonitoringFetal TachycardiaCongenital Heart DefectElectrophysiologyPublic HealthFetal ComplicationMedicineCongenital Heart AnomalyCardiologyAnesthesiologyArrhythmia
FETAL cardiac arrhythmia is being detected with increasing frequency as a result of continuous electronic monitoring of the fetal heart rate. Most of these cases have been recognized during labor, and a few have been identified during the early antepartum period.1 2 3 4 5 6 Most fetal cardiac arrhythmias have had a favorable outcome,2 3 4 but among the reported adverse neonatal sequelae is persistence of a supraventricular tachycardia in the newborn with or without subsequent congestive heart failure.2 , 5 , 7 We report a case of fetal tachycardia in which congestive heart failure developed in utero. The problem was identified at 26 weeks' gestation and treated successfully by . . .
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