| palliation, palliative operation |
|
A procedure carried out for the purpose of relieving symptoms or
ameliorating some of the adverse effects of an anomaly, which does not
address the fundamental anatomic/physiologic disturbance. Contrasts with
"repair" or "reparative operation".
|
| PAPVC |
|
Partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection. see anomalous pulmonary venous connection.
|
| parachute mitral valve |
|
A mitral valve abnormality in which all chordae tendineae of the mitral
valve, which may be shortened and thickened, insert in a single, abnormal
papillary muscle, usually causing mitral stenosis. The parachute mitral
valve may be part of the Shone complex. see also Shone complex.
|
| partial A-V septal defect |
|
see atrio-ventricular septal defect
|
| patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) |
|
A ductus that fails to undergo normal closure in the early post-natal
period. syn. persistently patent ductus arteriosus, persistent
arterial duct.
|
| patent foramen ovale |
|
Failure of anatomic fusion of the valve of the foramen ovale with the limbus
of the fossa ovalis that normally occurs when left atrial pressure exceeds
right atrial pressure after birth. There is no structural deficiency of
tissue of the atrial septum. The foramen is functionally closed as long as
left atrial pressure exceeds right atrial pressure, but can reopen if right
atrial pressure rises. PFO is found in up to 35% of the adult population in
pathological studies. The lower and variable prevalence reported in clinical
series depends on the techniques used to find it. syn: probe-patent
foramen ovale, PFO.
|
| pentalogy of Fallot |
|
Tetralogy of Fallot with, in addition, an ASD or PFO. see tetralogy of Fallot.
|
| perimembranous VSD |
|
see ventricular septal defect.
|
| persistent left superior vena cava (LSVC) |
|
Persistence of the left anterior cardinal vein (which normally obliterates
during embryogenesis) results in persistent left superior vena cava. LSVC
drains via the coronary sinus to the right atrium in more than 90% of
patients; rarely, it may directly drain to the left atrium in association
with other congenital heart defects (e.g., isomerism). Its prevalence is up
to 0.5% in the general population, and higher in patients with congenital
heart disease.
|
| PFO |
|
see patent foramen ovale.
|
| phlebotomy |
|
A palliative procedure involving withdrawal of whole blood (usually in up to
500 mL increments) which may be offered to patients with cyanotic CHD and
secondary erythrocytosis who are experiencing hyperviscosity symptoms.
Concomitant volume replacement is usually indicated.
|
| pink tetralogy of Fallot |
|
see tetralogy of Fallot.
|
| polycythemia vera |
|
A neoplastic transformation of all blood cell lines (erythrocyte, leukocyte,
and platelet) associated with increased numbers of cells in the peripheral
blood. Contrast with secondary erythrocytosis as seen in cyanotic heart
disease. see also erythrocytosis.
|
| polysplenia syndrome |
|
see isomerism/left isomerism.
|
| Potts shunt |
|
A palliative operation for the purpose of increasing pulmonary blood flow,
hence systemic oxygen saturation. The procedure involves creating a small
communication between a pulmonary artery and the ipsilateral descending
thoracic aorta. Often complicated by the development of pulmonary vascular
obstructive disease if too large, or acquired stenosis or atresia of the
pulmonary artery if distortion occurs. (Potts WJ et al. Anastomosis of aorta
to pulmonary artery: certain types of congenital heart disease. JAMA
1946;132:627-631.)
|
| PPH |
|
Primary pulmonary hypertension. see pulmonary hypertension.
|
| probe-patent foramen ovale |
|
see patent foramen ovale.
|
| protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) |
|
A complication seen following the Fontan operation in which protein is lost
via the gut, resulting in ascites, peripheral oedema, pleural and
pericardial effusions. It is of unknown cause, though exacerbated by high
systemic venous pressure. If serum protein and albumin are low, increased
alpha-1 antitrypsin in the stool supports the diagnosis of PLE.
|
| protrusio acetabulae |
|
Abnormal displacement of the head of the femur within the acetabulum. A radiological finding useful in the diagnosis of Marfan syndrome.
|
| pseudotruncus arteriosus |
|
Pulmonary atresia with a VSD, biventricular aorta, and pulmonary blood flow
provided by systemic to pulmonary collaterals. This anatomic arrangement had
previously been called "truncus arteriosus type IV" but is morphogenetically
a different lesion from truncus arteriosus. In pseudotruncus, the single
vessel arising from the ventricles is an aorta with an aortic valve, not a
truncus with a truncal valve, and pulmonary blood flow derives from
aorto-pulmonary collateral arteries, not from anomalously connected true
pulmonary arteries. |
| pulmonary artery banding |
|
Surgically created stenosis of the main pulmonary artery performed as a
palliative procedure to protect the lungs against high blood flow and
pressure when definitive correction of the underlying anomaly is not
immediately advisable, e.g. in the setting of a non-restrictive VSD. |
| pulmonary artery sling |
|
Anomalous origin of the left pulmonary artery from the right pulmonary
artery, such that it loops around the trachea. It may be associated with
complete cartilaginous rings in the distal trachea and tracheal stenosis. It
may occur as an isolated entity or in association with other congenital
heart defects. |
| pulmonary atresia |
|
An imperforate pulmonary valve. When associated with a VSD (variant of
tetralogy of Fallot), pulmonary blood flow arises from aorto-pulmonary
collaterals, and systemic venous return exits the right heart via the VSD.
When associated with intact interventricular septum, pulmonary artery blood
supply is via a patent ductus arteriosus, and systemic venous return exits
the right heart via an obligatory ASD. |
| pulmonary hypertension |
|
Elevated pulmonary arterial pressure. A common method to define the severity of pulmonary hypertension is the pulmonary/aortic systolic pressure ratio:
|
Severity
|
Ratio
|
|
mild
|
>0.3, <0.6
|
|
moderate
|
>0.6, <0.9
|
|
severe
|
<0.9 (Eisenmenger syndrome).
|
|