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Ventricular Dysfunction in the Case of the Sever Fetal Aortic Stenosis – the Role of Speckle-tracking Cover

Ventricular Dysfunction in the Case of the Sever Fetal Aortic Stenosis – the Role of Speckle-tracking

Open Access
|Apr 2020

Abstract

Congenital aortic stenosis (AS) occurs in around 0.2–0.5% of newborns, and its clinical severity is quite variable. Some of the newborns with AS require urgent medical care: prostaglandin infusion, balloon aortic valvuloplasty, or surgical intervention. Despite having a severe clinical evolution in neonates, the prenatal diagnosis of congenital AS is quite low. We present the case of a fetus with critical AS, who had been prenatally diagnosed at 35 weeks of gestation, via fetal cardiac ultra-sound. The echocardiographic parameters revealed a severely depressed left ventricular systolic function, with dilated chambers, and a severe aortic stenosis. Offline speckle-tracking analysis was performed in order to aid in deciding the optimal methods and timing of delivery. Left ventricular analysis revealed a severely impaired global longitudinal strain of 2.1%, left ventricular ejection fraction 18.4%, increased LV volumes, while the right ventricular function was only mildly depressed. Therefore, the decision was to delay the premature delivery, and the fetus was born at a gestational age of 38 weeks, in a hospital with a neonatal cardiovascular surgery department. The patient had undergone surgical repair of the cardiac anomaly at 3 days after birth.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jce-2019-0016 | Journal eISSN: 2457-5518 | Journal ISSN: 2457-550X
Language: English
Page range: 20 - 23
Submitted on: Oct 16, 2019
Accepted on: Nov 23, 2019
Published on: Apr 18, 2020
Published by: Asociatia Transilvana de Terapie Transvasculara si Transplant KARDIOMED
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2020 Liliana Gozar, Daniela Toma, Amalia Făgărășan, Dorottya Miklósi, Rodica Togănel, published by Asociatia Transilvana de Terapie Transvasculara si Transplant KARDIOMED
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.