| Literature DB >> 17922908 |
Abstract
Aorto-ventricular tunnel is a congenital, extracardiac channel which connects the ascending aorta above the sinutubular junction to the cavity of the left, or (less commonly) right ventricle. The exact incidence is unknown, estimates ranging from 0.5% of fetal cardiac malformations to less than 0.1% of congenitally malformed hearts in clinico-pathological series. Approximately 130 cases have been reported in the literature, about twice as many cases in males as in females. Associated defects, usually involving the proximal coronary arteries, or the aortic or pulmonary valves, are present in nearly half the cases. Occasional patients present with an asymptomatic heart murmur and cardiac enlargement, but most suffer heart failure in the first year of life. The etiology of aorto-ventricular tunnel is uncertain. It appears to result from a combination of maldevelopment of the cushions which give rise to the pulmonary and aortic roots, and abnormal separation of these structures. Echocardiography is the diagnostic investigation of choice. Antenatal diagnosis by fetal echocardiography is reliable after 18 weeks gestation. Aorto-ventricular tunnel must be distinguished from other lesions which cause rapid run-off of blood from the aorta and produce cardiac failure. Optimal management of symptomatic aorto-ventricular tunnel consists of diagnosis by echocardiography, complimented with cardiac catheterization as needed to elucidate coronary arterial origins or associated defects, and prompt surgical repair. Observation of the exceedingly rare, asymptomatic patient with a small tunnel may be justified by occasional spontaneous closure. All patients require life-long follow-up for recurrence of the tunnel, aortic valve incompetence, left ventricular function, and aneurysmal enlargement of the ascending aorta.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17922908 PMCID: PMC2089057 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-2-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Figure 1Schematic representation of the most common type of aorto-left ventricular tunnel. The middle figure shows a cross-sectional view at the approximate level of the aortic sinotubular junction. The tunnel passes from the ascending aorta into the tissue plane between the aortic and pulmonary roots. (a') is a longitudinal section across the left ventricular outflow, through the left and right coronary sinuses of Valsalva (plane "a" of the central figure). In this example, the aortic end of the tunnel lies above the ostium of the right coronary artery, while the ventricular end is found within the intercoronary, interleaflet triangle. The position of the aortic opening is variable and may be found anywhere above the left or right coronary sinus, or the intervening commissure. (b') depicts a longitudinal section crossing the noncoronary and right coronary aortic sinuses (line "b" in the central figure). Because the pulmonary valve lies distal to the aortic valve, the tunnel may displace the free-standing, muscular, subpulmonary infundibulum enroute to the left ventricular cavity. It does not, however, pass through any ventricular myocardium.
Figure 2Surgical repair of aorto-left ventricular tunnel (a) and aorto-right ventricular tunnel (b). The aortic orifice of either tunnel is closed with a patch inserted through an aortotomy. A left ventricular orifice is closed with a second patch, placed through the opened tunnel itself, which is then obliterated by reapproximation of its walls over the patch. The upper margin of this second patch attaches to the extra-luminal surface of the first. In the case of aorto-right ventricular tunnel, the right ventricular orifice is approached through the right ventricle or pulmonary valve, and the second patch lies completely separate from that in the aorta.