Abstract

There is an increasing population of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) due to successful pediatric medical and surgical intervention, and commensurate with this increase is a rise in heart failure, hospital admissions, and hospital costs among adult CHD patients. This group of patients requires careful long-term evaluation and follow-up of the residua and sequelae of their cardiac anomalies that arise in adulthood to prevent late complications. This article addresses congenital heart defects that are encountered in a general adult cardiology practice and reviews clinical, anatomic, and imaging features of each lesion, fundamental management issues, indications for interventions (and often re-interventions), issues related to endocarditis prophylaxis, pregnancy, and appropriateness of referral to a dedicated adult CHD program for long-term care.

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