JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
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The surgical anatomy of hearts with no direct communication between the right atrium and the ventricular mass--so-called tricuspid atresia.

Seventy-six hearts were studied having no direct communication between the right atrium and the ventricular mass. The different cardiac chamber combinations producing so-called "tricuspid atresia" were considered. The nature of the atrioventricular valve atresia, the morphology of the ventricular mass, the size and position of the interventricular communication, the ventriculoarterial connection, and the presence of subarterial outflow tract obstruction were all analyzed. The majority of cases were of the "classical" type, i.e., absent right atrioventricular connection with the left atrium connected to the left ventricle. In another group there was absence of the right atrioventricular connection but the left atrium drained into the morphologically right ventricle, which was left-sided. In a third group both atrial chambers connected with the ventricular mass but some structure, an imperforate valve or muscular partition, completely blocked the flow pathway through the right side of the heart. All the hearts described are candidates for the Fontan procedure with either an atrioventricular or an atriopulmonary conduit. The surgical options would not be affected by the observed variability at the atrioventricular junction but would be dictated by the feasibility of incorporating the subpulmonary ventricle within the pulmonary circulation.

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