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Heart Defects in Down SyndromeWhat to Expect if Your Baby has Trisomy 21 and Cardiac Problems
Congenital heart defects are common in infants with Down syndrome. Some are amenable to watchful waiting; others require urgent intervention. Knowing the language helps.
Down syndrome (trisomy 21) is a relatively common genetic syndrome, occurring in 1 of 800 to 1000 live births. Congenital heart defects are present in 40 to 60% of infants affected by Down syndrome. Before birth, the fetal heart shunts blood around the lungs, because the lungs are not functional in utero. A portal between the left and right sides of the heart keeps pressures equalized. Shortly after birth, several mechanical and physiologic processes occur that close the shunts, route blood to the lungs for oxygenation, increase pressures on the left side of the heart, and lead to the complete separation of the pulmonary and systemic vascular systems. While congenital heart defects also allow blood to bypass the lungs during fetal life, these abnormalities can cause significant distress when an infant takes its first few breaths. As the lungs expand and circulatory dynamics change, defective hearts often mix oxygenated and unoxygenated blood, and symptoms of hypoxia and/or heart failure may appear. Specific Heart Defects in Down Syndrome
(Sources: The Merck Manual, 16th Edition:2051-61; Am Fam Physician 1999;59(2):381-91) Some anatomical heart problems may not announce themselves immediately after birth; they may cause progressive difficulty only in the days and weeks following delivery. And, while many congenital heart defects produce easily detectable signs—such as a murmur—some potentially life-threatening anomalies don’t produce murmurs. In order to ensure that no serious cardiac abnormality is overlooked, all newborn infants who are suspected of having Down syndrome should have an electrocardiogram and echocardiogram (ultrasound of the heart).
The copyright of the article Heart Defects in Down Syndrome in Physical Disabilities is owned by Stephen Allen Christensen. Permission to republish Heart Defects in Down Syndrome in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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