Abstract

Common ventricle is a rare congenital anomaly in which the ventricular chamber receives blood from two separate atrioventricular (A-V) valves or a common A-V valve. Diagnosis of common ventricle was established in 55 patients aged 3 months to 33 years (mean 10 years) at cardiac catheterization in all 55 and at operation or autopsy in 24. In common ventricle with two angiographically demonstrable A-V valves (47 patients), the echocardiographic features included: (1) simultaneous recording (in the same sonic beam with the transducer held stationary) of the echoes of an anterior and a posterior A-V valve without an intervening septal echo (45 of 47 patients); (2) absence, on a base to apex scan, of the ventricular septal echo in the usual position separating the A-V valves (47 of 47 patients); (3) recording, in patients with common ventricle and outflow chamber, of this small outflow chamber anterior to the A-V valves (20 of 23 patients); and (4) recording of echographic continuity of the posterior A-V valve and great artery (27 of 31 patients). In common ventricle with a common A-V valve (8 patients), the echocardiographic features included: (1) a single demonstrable A-V valve, located posteriorly in the ventricle, which showed a large amplitude of excursion during diastole; and (2) absence of a second A-V valve echo or ventricular septal echo. Eight patients were studied postoperatively after surgical correction by ventricular septation. Echographic features included visualization of a prosthetic septum that produced a dense echo and divided the common ventricle into "right" and "left" ventricular chambers. This septum had a large excursion anteriorly during systole. Because common ventricle is now amenable to surgical correction, echocardiography should play an important role in assessment of ventricular anatomy in this complex congenital cardiac defect.

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