Spontaneous Closure of Physiologically Advantageous Ventricular Septal Defects
- 1 January 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 43 (1), 83-90
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.43.1.83
Abstract
The clinical and pathological features of two cases in which physiologically advantageous ventricular septal defects closed spontaneously are presented. The first patient, with tricuspid atresia, Type I(c), developed symptoms and signs of increasing systemic hypoxemia, decreasing pulmonary blood flow, and a systolic murmur of decreasing intensity. His ventricular septal defect, previously demonstrated angiocardiographically, could not be found at autopsy; it is presumed to have closed by fusion of its muscular rims with subsequent covering by endocardial proliferation. The second patient, with a double-outlet right ventricle, demonstrated progressive left ventricular enlargement and congestive failure despite increasing pulmonary vascular resistance. Postmortem examination showed that this defect was sealed by adherence of the septal leaflet of the tricuspid valve to the edges of the defect. Appreciation of the true nature of the changing anatomical situation would have resulted in more rational effective therapeutic approaches. The cases presented and review of pertinent literature contribute to more complete understanding of circumstances surrounding the spontaneous closure of ventricular septal defects.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spontaneous closure of ventricular septal defects by aneurysmal formation of the membranous septumThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1969
- Spontaneous closure of ventricular septal defect in tricuspid atresiaThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1969
- Origin of both great vessels from the right ventricle associated with severe obstruction to left ventricular outflowThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1969
- Origin of both great vessels from right ventricle with intact ventricular septumAmerican Heart Journal, 1968
- Obstructive ventricular septal defect in double outlet right ventricleThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1967
- The natural history of ventricular septal defects in infancyThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1965
- Double-outlet right ventricle: intact ventricular septum, mitral stenosis, and blind left ventricleAmerican Heart Journal, 1965
- Spontaneous Closure of a Membranous Ventricular Septal DefectBMJ, 1962
- ORIGIN OF BOTH GREAT VESSELS FROM THE RIGHT VENTRICLE WITHOUT PULMONARY STENOSISHeart, 1962
- Eisenmenger's complex. A clinical and pathologic study of four casesAmerican Heart Journal, 1956