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Cyanotic heart disease

Learn about heart disease symptoms.Get more information on heart disease treatment for your health!What can you do to prevent heart disease? Prevention details here.



Heart, section through the middle
Heart, section through the middle
Cardiac catheterization
Cardiac catheterization
Heart, front view
Heart, front view
Clubbing
Clubbing
Cyanotic heart disease
Cyanotic heart disease


Cyanotic heart disease

Definition:

Cyanotic heart disease is a defect or group of defects in the structure or function of the heart or the great vessels, present at birth, consisting of abnormal blood flow from the right to the left part of the circulatory system (either at the level of the atria, the ventricles, or the great vessels).

This abnormal communication (called right-to-left shunt) results in poor oxygenation of the body and therefore cyanosis (bluish coloration of the body).

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Alternative Names:
Right-to-left cardiac shunt; Right-to-left circulatory shunt

Causes, incidence, and risk factors:

Cyanotic heart diseases are congenital heart defects (heart diseases present at birth) that result in low oxygen levels in the blood and cause the child's skin to look blue (cyanosis).

This bluish coloration is most often detected on the lips, fingers, and toes or during exercise. Some heart defects cause major problems immediately after birth, and some cause few if any problems until adulthood.

Not all congenital heart diseases are cyanotic. Congenital heart defects that cause cyanosis include the following:

Most congenital heart disease occurs as a birth defect limited only to the heart, but some conditions occur as part of genetic and chromosomal syndromes that affect many organs.

Some syndromes that include congenital heart disease (not all cyanotic) are Down syndrome, trisomy 13, Turner's syndrome, Marfan syndrome, Noonan syndrome, and Ellis-van Creveld syndrome.

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