Ventricular Septal Defect Symptoms, Treatment, Surgery & Types (original) (raw)

Facts and about ventricular septal defect

Heart

The ventricles are the two lower chambers of the heart. The wall between them is called the septum. A hole in the septum is called a septal defect.

What is ventricular septal defect?

The ventricles are the two lower chambers of the heart. The wall between them is called the septum. A hole in the septum is called a septal defect. If the hole is located between the upper chambers or atria, it is called an atrial septal defect. Infants may be born with either or both types of defects. These conditions are commonly known as "holes in the heart."

Normally, unoxygenated blood from the body returns to the right half of the heart, that is the right atrium, then the right ventricle, which pumps the blood to the lungs to absorb oxygen. After leaving the lungs, the oxygenated blood returns to the left half of the heart, that is the left atrium, then the left ventricle, where it is pumped out to provide oxygen to all the tissues of the body. A ventricular septal defect can allow newly oxygenated blood to flow from the left ventricle, where the pressures are higher, to the right ventricle, where the pressures are lower, and mix with unoxygenated blood. The mixed blood in the right ventricle flows back or recirculates into the lungs. This means that the right and left ventricles are working harder, pumping a greater volume of blood than they normally would. Eventually, the left ventricle can work so hard that it starts to fail. It can no longer pump blood as well as it did. Blood returning to the heart from the blood vessels backs up into the lungs, causing pulmonary congestion, and further back up into the body, causing weight gain and fluid retention. Overall, this is called congestive heart failure.

What are the symptoms of ventricular septal defect?

Small holes in the ventricular septum usually produce no symptoms but are often recognized by the child's health care provider when a loud heart murmur along the left side of the lower breast bone or sternum is heard. Large holes typically produce symptoms 1-6 months after an infant's birth. Large holes may not have murmurs at all. Instead, the left ventricle begins to fail, producing the following symptoms:

When a ventricular septal defect is not detected early in life, it can cause more severe problems and more severe symptoms as time goes on. The biggest concern is the development of high pressure in the lungs (pulmonary hypertension). If the ventricular septal defect is not surgically closed, irreversible pulmonary hypertension can develop, and the child is no longer operable and has a poor prognosis. The following are typical symptoms of pulmonary hypertension:

The skin turns faintly bluish when the tissues are not receiving quite enough oxygen. This condition is often termed "hypoxemia" or "hypoxia."

What causes ventricular septal defects?

No one knows what causes ventricular septal defects, but they probably come from a malformation of the heart that occurs while the infant is developing in the womb.

The most common type of ventricular septal defect is the membranous variant. In this type, the hole is located below the aortic valve, which controls the flow of blood from the left ventricle into the main artery of the body, the aorta.

When to seek medical care for ventricular septal defect

Any of the following should be reported to your child's healthcare professional:

An immediate visit to the nearest hospital emergency department is warranted if you notice any of the following in your infant:

What tests diagnose ventricular septal defect?

If a ventricular septal defect is noted before your baby leaves the hospital, several tests may be ordered before discharge.

A ventricular septal defect is detected on physical examination by a systolic murmur audible with a stethoscope along the lower left sternal or breast bone border. It is related to the oxygenated blood “swishing” through the hole or VSD into the right ventricle.

The presence of a hole in the heart can be confirmed by an echocardiogram. This painless test uses ultrasound waves to construct a moving picture of the heart. It can quantitate the size of the left-to-right shunt by enlargement of the left ventricle, pressure in the lungs, and actually estimate the degree of shunting by an empirical formula.

Chest-X-ray is useful to see if the overall heart size is enlarged, plus evidence of fluid in the lungs or pulmonary congestion. An electrocardiogram helps check to see if the left ventricle is the dominant working muscle, i.e. the more right ventricular enlargement or hypertrophy seen, the more the physician must worry about pulmonary hypertension, and therefore operate sooner.

Cardiac catheterization may be performed in certain circumstances.

What is the treatment for ventricular septal defect?

In some children with ventricular septal defects, the defect will close on its own as the child grows.

If a larger ventricular septal defect is causing symptoms, your child's healthcare professional may prescribe medication.

What medications treat ventricular septal defects?

What about surgery for ventricular septal Defect surgery?

Larger ventricular septal defects do not close as the child grows. If it does not close, closing the heart surgically is necessary.

Surgery is not usually performed in newborns because small defects will close spontaneously in a significant percentage. The surgery also is riskier in the first few months of life; the risk of death from the operation is higher in the first 6 months of life than later.

Researchers are testing devices that cover the defect, performed in the cardiac catheterization laboratory, not by open-heart surgery.

So I need to follow up with my doctor after being diagnosed and treated for the ventricular septal defect.

Can ventricular septal defect be prevented?

A woman can do nothing during pregnancy to prevent her baby from developing a ventricular septal defect.

What is the outlook for a person with ventral septal defect?

During the growth of a child, the defect may become smaller and close on its own.

Several other conditions may result from ventricular septal defects.

Ventricular Septal Defect: What to Do after Your Child's Visit

How can you care for your child at home?

References

Medically reviewed by Robert J. Bryg, MD; Board Certified Internal Medicine with subspecialty in Cardiovascular Disease

REFERENCE:

Fulton, D. R., MD., et al. "Pathophysiology and clinical features of isolated ventricular septal defects in infants and children." UpToDate. Updated June 2016.
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/pathophysiology-and-clinical-features-of-isolated-ventricular-septal-defects-in-infants-and-children