Prenatal echocardiography at 32 weeks gestation successfully identified massive biventricular hypertrophy in a female fetus, leading to heart transplantation in the newborn.
Case Report
1 female foetus of a healthy, non-diabetic 27-year-old woman, diagnosed with massive left ventricular hypertrophy at 32 weeks gestation.
Prenatal echocardiography
Recognition of massive cardiac hypertrophy leading to heart transplantation
Prenatal echocardiography can successfully identify severe foetal hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, enabling timely postnatal interventions such as heart transplantation.
A healthy, non-diabetic 27-year-old woman attended a routine foetal echography during the 32nd week of an uneventful first pregnancy. Growth of the (female) foetus was normal for the gestational phase and no general malformation was observed. However, the echocardiographic evaluation (Panel A) showed massive left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (end-diastolic thickness of the interventricular septum, 13 mm; left posterior wall, 22 mm); the right-ventricular free wall was also hypertrophic. These findings were confirmed at birth (Panel B) by echocardiographic demonstration of massive cardiac …
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Prandstraller et al. (Wed,) conducted a case report in Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (n=1). Prenatal echocardiography and heart transplantation was evaluated. Prenatal echocardiography at 32 weeks gestation successfully identified massive biventricular hypertrophy in a female fetus, leading to heart transplantation in the newborn.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f0cfedb606b7e8fdeb2f4b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehm510
Daniela Prandstraller
Ornella Leone
Elena Biagini
European Heart Journal
University of Bologna
IRCCS Azienda Ospedliero-Universitaria di Bologna Policlinico di Sant'Orsola
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