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Congenital Heart Defects – Types, Causes and Treatment

Definition

Congenital heart defects (also called CHDs) are heart conditions that a baby is born with. These conditions can affect the heart’s shape or how it works or both. CHDs can be mild or serious. CHDs are the most common types of birth defects. Birth defects are structural changes present at birth that can affect almost any part of the body. They may affect how the body looks, works or both. Birth defects can cause problems in overall health, how the body develops or how the body works.

Critical congenital heart defects (also called critical CHDs or critical congenital heart disease) are the most serious congenital heart defects. Babies with critical CHDs need surgery or other treatment within the first year of life. Without treatment, critical CHDs can cause serious health problems and death. Nearly 1 in 100 babies (about 1 percent or 40,000 babies) is born with a heart defect in the United States each year. About 1 in 4 babies born with a heart defect (about 25 percent) has a critical CHD. Some heart defects don’t need treatment or can be treated easily. But others, like some critical CHDs, may need surgeries over several years.

Types of Congenital Heart Defects

There are many different types of congenital heart defects. Some are commonly called a “hole in the heart” because they involve an abnormal connection between the heart’s chambers. But other types of heart defects involve:

Types of congenital heart defects include:

Sometimes, a child can be born with more than one congenital heart defect.

Congenital Heart Defects Risk factors

Certain environmental and genetic risk factors might play a role in the development of congenital heart disease, including:

Causes of Congenital Heart Defects

In around eight out of 10 cases, the reason for the congenital heart defect is unknown. Some of the known causes of CHD include:

Genes – 20 per cent of cases have a genetic cause

Other birth defects – A baby affected by certain birth defects, such as Down syndrome, is more likely to have malformations of the heart

Maternal illness – Illness of the mother during pregnancy (for example, rubella – now rare) may increase the risk of congenital heart disorders

Medication and drugs – Medication (over-the-counter or prescription) or illicit drugs taken by the mother during pregnancy may increase the risk of congenital heart disorders

Alcohol – A mother who drinks large amounts of alcohol during pregnancy may increase the risk of congenital heart disorders

Maternal health – Factors such as unmanaged diabetes and poor nutrition during pregnancy may increase the risk

Maternal age – Babies of older women are more likely to have a birth defect than babies of younger women.

Congenital Heart Defects Symptoms

The symptoms of congenital heart defects include:

Complications

Potential complications of a congenital heart defect include:

Diagnosis and test

You or your baby may need one or more of the following tests to determine whether symptoms are caused by a congenital heart defect:

Treatment and medications

Depending on the severity and type of congenital heart defect involved, its treatment varies. Some babies may have mild heart attacks that get cured by themselves over time. Other children may have a more severe manifestation of defects that call for extensive treatment. In such cases, your options include:

Medications

Numerous medications can help the heart function more efficiently. Some may also be used to prevent the formation of blood clots and to control an irregular heartbeat.

Implantable Heart Devices

Certain devices such as pacemakers that help regulate an abnormal heart rate and implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) that can correct irregular heartbeats, can prevent some of the complications associated with congenital heart defects.

Catheter Procedures

These permit doctors to fix or repair congenital heart defects without opening the chest and heart surgically. Here, the doctor inserts a catheter through a vein in the leg and guide it up to the heart. Using small tools threaded through the catheter, s/he then proceeds to correct the defect. With advancement of technology most of heart defects can be closed in the Cathlab with catheter procedures. It decreases risks & complications of cardiac surgery.

Open-Heart Surgery

These may be required if catheter procedures are unable to repair a defect. These can close holes in the heart, widen blood vessels, or repair heart valves.

Heart Transplant

In cases where a congenital heart defect is too complex to be repaired, a heart transplant may be resorted to. During this procedure, a donor’s healthy heart replaces the patient’s heart.

Prevention of Congenital Heart Defects

How can I reduce the risk of a heart defect?

Scientists don’t have all the answers yet as to what causes heart defects other than random gene mutations. But, there are things that place you at higher risk (smoking, alcohol, certain medications, etc.) and these should be avoided during pregnancy. There are otherwise no proven strategies to prevent CHD.

You should follow your healthcare provider’s instructions during pregnancy, including:

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