Articles: cor-triatriatum.
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Sep 2011
Case Reports[Anaesthesia for caesarean section in a pregnant woman with cor triatriatum].
A 41-year-old woman suffering from a left cor triatrium, pregnant for the first time, was hospitalized for a caesarean section in the context of a pulmonary arterial hypertension with severe anaemia. The anaesthetic strategy which was decided on involved setting up a haemodynamic monitoring prior to induction of a general anaesthetia with etomidate, remifentanil and succinylcholine and maintained with propofol, sufentanil and cisatracurium. ⋯ The improvement of the arterial pulmonary hypertension immediately after coming out of the operating theatre allowed the patient to be briefly monitored in the intensive care unit and to be allowed home on the 10th day following the operation. The patient's cardiopathy was corrected in the 5th month after the birth.
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J Am Soc Echocardiogr · Jun 2011
Case ReportsReal-time three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiographic imaging of cor triatriatum and persistent left superior vena cava.
The authors describe the case of a 54-year-old woman with the association of two rare congenital cardiac anomalies: cor triatriatum and persistent left superior vena cava with the special characteristic of direct drainage to the right atrium. Real-time three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography offered a comprehensive anatomic and functional evaluation of these infrequent entities.
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Cor triatriatum sinistrum is a rare congenital cardiac anomaly in which the left atrium is divided into two compartments by a fibromuscular membrane. In most cases, the two cavities communicate through one or more openings. ⋯ The authors present four cases of cor triatriatum sinistrum diagnosed in different clinical contexts and age-groups. In all cases the diagnosis was based on echocardiographic findings (transthoracic and transesophageal) and was supplemented by other imaging modalities.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Jan 2010
Case ReportsAnesthetic management for resection of cor triatriatum during the second trimester of pregnancy.
Hemodynamic changes during pregnancy can result in cardiovascular decompensation in women with pre-existing cardiac diseases. Despite optimized medical treatment, some patients with severe structural cardiac abnormalities may need surgical intervention during pregnancy. We describe a woman who presented at 20 weeks of gestation with acute heart failure due to cor triatriatum, a rare form of congenital heart disease. ⋯ She underwent urgent corrective open heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. Perioperative anesthetic management included prevention of tachycardia, atrial dysrhythmias and pulmonary hypertension, close monitoring for and prompt treatment of maternal hypotension, maintaining euvolemia and good cardiac contractility and avoiding hemodilution and hypothermia. These approaches, together with minimizing bypass time, resulted in successful maternal and fetal outcome.