Classification of Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
Classification of Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
CCHDs are commonly classified based on the underlying physiological mechanism:
1. The “5 Ts” of Classic Cyanotic Heart Disease
A simple mnemonic often used:
- Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF)
- Transposition of the Great Arteries (TGA)
- Tricuspid Atresia
- Truncus Arteriosus
- Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Connection (TAPVC)
(Other important cyanotic lesions may also be included, e.g., Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome, Ebstein’s anomaly.)
2. Physiological Classification
A. Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow
- Caused by obstruction to right ventricular outflow.
- Right-to-left shunt at atrial or ventricular level provides systemic output.
Examples: - Tetralogy of Fallot
- Pulmonary atresia (with or without VSD)
- Tricuspid atresia
- Ebstein’s anomaly
B. Increased Pulmonary Blood Flow
- Mixing of systemic and pulmonary venous blood, but pulmonary over-circulation occurs.
Examples: - Transposition of Great Arteries (TGA)
- Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Connection (TAPVC)
- Truncus arteriosus
- Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS) (mixing lesion with duct-dependent systemic flow)
- Double outlet right ventricle (some variants)
3. Embryological/Anatomical Classification
- Conotruncal abnormalities → TOF, Truncus arteriosus, TGA, Double outlet RV
- Septal defects with outflow obstruction → Tricuspid atresia, Pulmonary atresia with VSD
- Anomalous pulmonary venous return → TAPVC
- Hypoplastic structures → HLHS
4. Clinical/Echocardiographic Classification
- Cyanotic lesions with decreased pulmonary blood flow → TOF, Tricuspid atresia, Pulmonary atresia
- Cyanotic lesions with increased pulmonary blood flow → TGA, TAPVC, Truncus arteriosus
- Single-ventricle physiology → HLHS, Univentricular heart
✅ Summary Table:
Group | Examples |
---|---|
Decreased pulmonary blood flow | TOF, Pulmonary atresia, Tricuspid atresia, Ebstein’s anomaly |
Increased pulmonary blood flow | TGA, TAPVC, Truncus arteriosus, HLHS |
Conotruncal anomalies | TOF, TGA, Truncus arteriosus, DORV |
Abnormal venous return | TAPVC |
Hypoplastic structures | HLHS |
Lesion Type | Examples | Hemodynamics & Shunt Physiology | Role of PDA / PFO / VSD | Screening Findings | CXR Findings | ECG Axis Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Right Heart Obstructive Lesions | – Pulmonary atresia (PA)- Tricuspid atresia- TOF- Critical pulmonary stenosis | ↓ Pulmonary blood flow; Right-to-left intracardiac shunt | – PDA: supplies pulmonary blood flow (Ao → PA)- PFO: RA → LA (deoxygenated)- VSD: RV → LV (deoxygenated) | – O₂ sat <90%- No upper/lower extremity gradient- Positive hyperoxia test | ↓ or normal pulmonary blood flow | – PA: Left axis (0° to +90°)- Tricuspid atresia: Left superior axis (0° to –90°)- TOF & Critical PS: Right axis (+90° to +180°) |
Left Heart Obstructive Lesions | – Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS)- Interrupted Aortic Arch (IAA)- Coarctation of Aorta (CoA)- Critical Aortic Stenosis | ↓ Systemic flow; Left-to-right intracardiac shunt → pulmonary overcirculation | – PDA: supplies systemic blood flow (PA → Ao)- PFO: LA → RA (oxygenated)- VSD: LV → RV (oxygenated) | – O₂ sat <95%- >3% upper vs. lower sat difference- Negative hyperoxia test- Positive BP gradient (except HLHS) | ↑ Pulmonary blood flow | – Normal newborn axis (+90° to +180°)- Critical AS: Left axis (0° to +90°) |
Mixing Lesions | – Transposition of Great Arteries (TGA)- Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return (TAPVR)- Truncus Arteriosus | Complete mixing of systemic & pulmonary circulations; Ductal-independent | – PDA: Not required but may coexist- PFO: May or may not be present | – O₂ sat <95%- No upper/lower sat difference- Exception: d-TGA + PHTN/CoA → higher foot O₂ sat vs. arm- Negative hyperoxia test | Normal or ↑ pulmonary blood flow | Normal newborn axis (+90° to +180°) |
🔹 20 Short Questions & Answers – CCHD Evaluation
Q1. What is the hallmark of right heart obstructive lesions on CCHD screening?
A1. Oxygen saturation <90% with no pre/post-ductal gradient; hyperoxia test positive.
Q2. Which lesions are classified as right heart obstructive?
A2. Pulmonary atresia, tricuspid atresia, tetralogy of Fallot, and critical pulmonary stenosis.
Q3. What is the primary role of PDA in right heart obstructive lesions?
A3. PDA supplies pulmonary blood flow by shunting blood from aorta to pulmonary artery.
Q4. What axis deviation is typical for tricuspid atresia?
A4. Left superior axis deviation (0° to –90°).
Q5. Which CXR finding is seen in right heart obstructive lesions?
A5. Decreased or normal pulmonary vascular markings (↓ pulmonary blood flow).
Q6. Which lesions are classified as left heart obstructive?
A6. Hypoplastic left heart syndrome, interrupted aortic arch, coarctation of aorta, and critical aortic stenosis.
Q7. What is the hallmark of left heart obstructive lesions on screening?
A7. O₂ saturation <95% with >3% difference between upper and lower extremities.
Q8. What role does PDA play in left heart obstructive lesions?
A8. PDA supplies systemic blood flow by shunting blood from pulmonary artery to aorta.
Q9. What is the typical chest X-ray finding in left heart obstructive lesions?
A9. Increased pulmonary blood flow due to left-to-right shunting and pulmonary overcirculation.
Q10. Which ECG finding is characteristic of critical aortic stenosis in newborns?
A10. Left axis deviation (0° to +90°).
Q11. Which condition among left heart obstructive lesions does NOT show BP gradient?
A11. Hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS).
Q12. Which lesions are mixing type CCHDs?
A12. Transposition of great arteries, TAPVR, and truncus arteriosus.
Q13. Are mixing lesions ductal-dependent?
A13. No, mixing lesions are ductal-independent but may coexist with PDA/PFO.
Q14. What is the hallmark O₂ saturation finding in mixing lesions?
A14. O₂ saturation <95% without a pre/post-ductal gradient.
Q15. What unique feature is seen in d-TGA with pulmonary hypertension or CoA?
A15. Reversed differential cyanosis (higher O₂ in foot than right arm).
Q16. What is the hyperoxia test result in mixing lesions?
A16. Negative hyperoxia test.
Q17. What axis deviation is commonly seen in mixing lesions?
A17. Normal newborn axis (90° to 180°).
Q18. What is the ECG axis in tetralogy of Fallot?
A18. Right axis deviation (90° to 180°).
Q19. Which lesion shows left axis (0° to +90°) on ECG among right-sided lesions?
A19. Pulmonary atresia.
Q20. Summarize the CXR findings across the three groups of lesions.
A20. Right heart obstructive → decreased flow; Left heart obstructive → increased flow; Mixing lesions → normal to increased flow.
👉 Do you also want me to convert this 20 Q&A block into a styled WordPress HTML accordion format (collapsible cream boxes with red separators like your MCQ quizzes), so learners can expand each answer interactively?