Kuwabara Yoshimitsu, Shima Yoshio, Takeuchi Masato, Shinohara Tsuguo, Awataguchi Kouichi, Araki Tsutomu, Shin Sumio
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Japanese Red Cross Katsushika Maternity Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.
Arch Gynecol Obstet. 2003 Feb;267(4):236-8. doi: 10.1007/s00404-002-0307-6. Epub 2002 Jun 6.
A 23-year-old woman, gravida 1, was referred to our hospital for possible fetal distress at 32 weeks of pregnancy. A fetal cardiotochogram showed a reactive pattern, but mild continuous bradycardia and an intermittent pulse were observed, regarded as a sinus type and a type of A-V block, respectively. The continuous deceleration of the heart rate to 95 bpm was observed frequently at 35 weeks, 3 days of gestation. Thus, an emergent cesarean section was performed and a viable 2,082 g female infant was delivered. The neonate gradually became cyanotic, and an echocardiogram was performed. The neonate was regarded as a right ventricular outflow obstruction with intact ventricular septum. Unlike other cases, the infant revealed a moderately developed right ventricle despite a severely stenotic tricuspid valve. The infant died 27 days after birth and an autopsy established the diagnosis of critical pulmonary stenosis with intact ventricular septum. Right ventricular myocardial sinusoidal-coronary artery connections, one of the major features of this type of heart anomaly, was speculated to be involved in the cause of fetal bradyarrhythmias.