Rice M J, Seward J B, Hagler D J, Mair D D, Feldt R H, Puga F J, Danielson G K, Edwards W D, Tajik A J
Am J Cardiol. 1983 Jan 15;51(2):288-92. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9149(83)80052-6.
The course and management of 40 consecutive newborns (aged less than 2 weeks) who presented with signs and symptoms of congenital heart disease were reviewed to determine the impact of 2-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography on their subsequent management. Of the 40 patients with congenital heart disease, 60% did not undergo cardiac catheterization. Forty-two percent of the patients who were treated surgically went directly to operation without preoperative cardiac catheterization. Only 40% of the patients with congenital heart disease required cardiac catheterization in the newborn period, and 43% of these procedures were primarily therapeutic (that is, balloon atrial septostomy). In each patient 2-D echocardiography correctly identified the major cardiac malformation and there was good agreement with angiographic, surgical, and autopsy findings. The most commonly overlooked defect was a patent ductus arteriosus. Thus, 2-D echocardiography not only allows diagnosis of congenital heart disease in the newborn but can expedite clinical management. No longer is cardiac catheterization necessarily the primary means for an anatomic diagnosis of congenital cardiac malformations in the newborn.