| Literature DB >> 29340729 |
Wilke M C Koenraadt1, Margot M Bartelings2, Adriana C Gittenberger-de Groot1,2, Regina Bökenkamp3, Marco C DeRuiter2, Martin J Schalij1, Monique R M Jongbloed4,5.
Abstract
The aortic and pulmonary valve share a common developmental origin from the embryonic arterial trunk. Bicuspid aortic valve is the most common congenital anomaly and can occur isolated as well as in association with other congenital heart disease (CHD). Data on pulmonary valve morphology in these cases are scarce. In this study, we aimed to determine pulmonary valve morphology in hearts with BAV associated with CHD. In 83 post-mortem heart specimens with BAV and associated CHD, pulmonary valve morphology was studied and related to BAV morphology. In 14/83 (17%) hearts, the pulmonary valve was affected, bicuspid in 8/83 (10%), dome-shaped in 3/83 (4%) and atretic in 3/83 (4%). In specimens with a bicuspid pulmonary valve, 5/8 (63%) had a strictly bicuspid aortic valve (without raphe), 2/3 hearts (67%) with dome-shaped pulmonary valves and 2/3 hearts (67%) with atretic pulmonary valves had BAV without raphe. Six out of eight (75%) specimens with a bicuspid pulmonary valve had a perimembranous ventricular septal defect (VSD). 4/8 (50%) specimens with a bicuspid pulmonary valve were associated with chromosomal abnormalities: 3 (38%) had trisomy 18 and 1 (13%) had trisomy 13. In BAV with associated CHD, abnormal pulmonary valve morphology was observed in 17% of the hearts. The majority of hearts with abnormal pulmonary valve morphology had a Type B bicuspid aortic valve (without raphe). Bilateral semilunar valvular disease is associated with Type B BAVs and in many cases related to chromosomal abnormalities. As this study was performed in post-mortem specimens with high frequency of associated CHD, caution is warranted with application of these results to the general BAV population.Entities:
Keywords: Bicuspid aortic valve; Congenital heart disease; Morphology; Pulmonary valve; Valvular disease
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29340729 PMCID: PMC5895682 DOI: 10.1007/s00246-018-1807-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Cardiol ISSN: 0172-0643 Impact factor: 1.655
Fig. 1a Schematic overview of different BAV morphologies (Modified after [13]). b Schematic overview of results in the study population. c Development of semilunar valves. The initially unseparated common arterial trunk contains endocardial cushions (blue), that will be separated, orchestrated by neural crest cells (green dots). d Examples of post-mortem heart specimens with variable pulmonary valve morphology. Left Type 1A BAV and tricuspid pulmonary valve. Middle Type 3B BAV and bicuspid pulmonary valve. No raphe can be determined in the pulmonary valve. Right Type 1B bicuspid aortic valve and dome-shaped pulmonary valve
Patient characteristics and associated cardiovascular abnormalities
| Complete study group |
| % |
|---|---|---|
| Gender (male:female) | 48:35 | |
|
| ||
| Type 1A | 45/84 | 54 |
| Type 2A | 9/84 | 11 |
| Type 3A | 5/84 | 6 |
| Type 1B | 16/84 | 19 |
| Type 2B | 5/84 | 6 |
| Type 3B | 4/84 | 5 |
|
| ||
| Tricuspid | 69/83 | 83 |
| Dome-shaped | 3/83 | 4 |
| Bicuspid | 8/83 | 10 |
| Atresia | 3/83 | 4 |
|
| ||
| Aortic arch anomalies | 46/77 | 60 |
| | 13/77 | 17 |
| | 33/77 | 43 |
| ASD | 11/83 | 13 |
| AVSD | 4/84 | 5 |
| AV valve anomalies | ||
| | 15/68 | 22 |
| | 30/50 | 60 |
| DORV | 6/83 | 7 |
| PLSCV | 15/83 | 18 |
| TGA | 2/74 | 3 |
| VSD | 42/84 | 50 |
| | 20/84 | 24 |
| | 22/84 | 26 |
|
| ||
| Trisomy 9 | 1 | |
| Trisomy 13 | 2 | |
| Trisomy 18 | 5 | |
ASD atrial septal defect; AVSD atrioventricular septal defect; AV valve atrioventricular valve; TV tricuspid valve; MV mitral valve ; DORV double outlet right ventricle; PLSCV persistent left superior caval vein; TGA transposition of the great arteries; VSD ventricular septal defect; PM VSD perimembranous VSD
aThe number of observed cases that could be assessed for this particular abnormality
Associated cardiovascular abnormalities in patients with pulmonary valve anomalies
| Subgroup with pulmonary valve anomalies ( | AoV morphology | Associated anomalies |
|---|---|---|
| Dome-shaped ( | 1A | ASD, TV dysplasia |
| 1B | Muscular VSD | |
| 3B | PLSCV, PM VSD, trisomy 18 | |
| Bicuspid ( | 1A | DORV, PM VSD |
| 1B | TV hypoplasia, arch hypoplasia, PM VSD, trisomy 18 | |
| 2A ( | PLSCV, ASD, TV dysplasia, PM VSD; MV hypoplasia, arch hypoplasia, PM VSD | |
| 2B | PLSVC, PM VSD, trisomy 18 | |
| 3B ( | Trisomy 13; PLSVC, TV dysplasia; PLSCV, PM VSD, trisomy 18 | |
| Atretic ( | 1A | AVSD, DORV |
| 1B | DORV, TV dysplasia, MV hypoplasia, PM VSD | |
| 3B | Muscular VSD |
ASD atrial septal defect; AVSD atrioventricular septal defect; AV valve atrioventricular valve; TV tricuspid valve; MV mitral valve; DORV double outlet right ventricle; PLSCV persistent left superior caval vein; TGA transposition of the great arteries; VSD ventricular septal defect; PM VSD perimembranous VSD