Michael P. D'Alessandro, M.D.
Peer Review Status: Internally Peer Reviewed
Etiology/Pathophysiology:
The aorta arises from the right ventricle, and the pulmonary artery
arises from the left ventricle.In 85% of the cases the aorta is
anterior and to the right of the pulmonary artery (D-TGA). The venous
connections with the atria are normal and the right and left atria
connect to the morphologic right and left ventricles. Therefore the
pulmonary and systemic circulations are in parallel and a
communication between the two is needed. Communications can include a
VSD (seen in 50%), ASD / foramen ovale, and PDA. Pulmonary stenosis
can be present, and 10-15% have a right aortic arch.
Pathology:
Not applicable
Imaging Findings:
TGA is the first consideration in a cyanotic infant with increased
vascularity. The increased vascularity is due to the VSD or PDA.
There is a flat or concave pulmonary artery segment, a narrowed upper
mediastinum, and moderate cardiomegaly. The narrowed mediastinum is
due to the anterior aorta with anteroposterior orientation of the
arch, posteromedial displacement of the pulmonary artery, and stress
related thymic atrophy.There often is preferential blood flow to the
right pulmonary artery because the right pulmonary artery lines up
with the right ventricle outflow track. The egg shaped heart is due
to right atrial and left ventricle dilation. The narrow mediastinum
and egg shaped heart cause an "egg on a string" appearance.
DDX:
References:
See References Chapter.
See related Provider Topics Congenital Heart Disease, Genetics/Birth Defects or Heart and Circulation.
See related Patient Topics Congenital Heart Disease, Genetics/Birth Defects or Heart and Circulation.
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