Cor triatriatum
Background
- Congenital Anamoly with heart with three atria
- Either LA or RA can be divided into 2 compartments (cor triatriatum sinistrum or cor triatriatum dextrum)
- Can be associated with other congenital syndromes including tetralogy of Fallot, double outlet RV, coarctation of aorta, VSD, AV septal defect
- 0.1-0.4% incidence in USA
Clinical Features
- Sinistrum variant most associated with other congenital cardiovascular defects in symptomatic infants
- Can be incidental finding in adults as either isolated finding or in association with PFO, ASD, persistent L superior vena cava
- Symptoms depend on size of opening in accessory membrane between the atria
- Symptoms include dyspnea on exertion, orthopnea, easy fatiguability, low exercise tolerance, palpitations
- Increased risk of thrombus formation in LA
Differential Diagnosis
- Pericarditis
- Pulmonary Hypertension
- Right heart Failure
- Atrial Myxoma
- Mitral Stenosis
- Tricuspid Stenosis
Diagnosis
- Murmur
- Elevated JVD
- Hepatomegaly
- Ascites
- Peripheral edema
- Often discovered on cardiac imaging studies (Echo, Right heart cath)
Management
- As associated with major cyanotic or acyanotic congenital heart lesions, mortality can be up to 75% in untreated symptomatic infants
- Initial workup may include:
- ECG: Atrial premature complexes, Left or Right atrial abnormalities, Right axis deviation, Right heart strain
- Chest Xray
- Echocardiogram
- Right Heart Cath
- Control hypoxia, fluid status, rate in Afib
- DVT/PE prophylaxis
Disposition
- Cardiac surgery consultation
- Medical management includes treating increased pulmonary vascular resistance, heart failure.
- Inotropes, diuretics
See Also
External Links
References
- MedScape
