Canale J M, Sahn D J, Valdes-Cruz L M, Allen H D, Goldberg S J, Ovitt T W
Am Heart J. 1981 Mar;101(3):255-9. doi: 10.1016/0002-8703(81)90186-1.
Eight children with angiographically proven aneurysm of the membranous ventricular septum (AVS) associated with ventricular septal defect were studied by real-time cross-sectional echocardiography. A curvilinear, sickle (dome-shaped), or irregular echo arising from the interventricular septum and bulging toward the right ventricle in systole was visualized in all patients. This finding was detected in 7 of 8 long axis views, 5 of 8 short axis views, 5 of 7 apex four-chamber views, and 4 of 7 subcostal four-chamber views. In addition, real-time cross-sectional echocardiograpic studies were performed in 40 patients with angiographically proven membranous ventricular septal defect without AVS; in only one patient was the abnormal echo suggesting aneurysm of the ventricular septum detected in the long axis and apex four-chamber views. Our echo study suggests that two-dimensional echocardiography has acceptable specificity for the diagnosis of AVS.