Cyanotic heart disease


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

Cyanotic heart disease is a heart defect, present at birth (congenital), that results in low blood oxygen levels. There may be more than one defect. The defect affects the structure or function of the heart or vessels.


Alternative Names

Right-to-left cardiac shunt; Right-to-left circulatory shunt


Causes, incidence, and risk factors

Cyanotic heart disease results in abnormal blood flow from the right to the left part of the body. This abnormal blood flow (called right-to-left shunt) causes too little oxygen to move through the blood.

Cynanotic heart disease causes the child's skin to look blue (cyanosis). This bluish color is most often seen 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.



Congenital heart defects that cause cyanosis include:

Most congenital heart diseases affect only to the heart, but some conditions many affect many organs. Not all congenital heart diseases are cyanotic.

Some cyanotic heart diseases are caused by drug use, chemical exposure, or infections (such as rubella) during pregnancy.

Cyanosis may also be caused by lung disease, abnormal forms of hemoglobin (the protein that carries oxygen through the blood), dehydration, and hypoglycemia.

Cyanosis is a sign of Eisenmenger syndrome, a condition that occurs in patients with congenital heart disease. Eisenmenger syndrome occurs as a complication of increased blood flow from the left side of the heart directly to the lungs. This results in severe lung diseases and increased pressures on the right side of the heart.



Review Date: 06/02/2006
Reviewed By: Alan Berger, MD, Assistant Professor, Divisions of Cardiology and Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN. Review providedby VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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