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Baloria A, Vinayak S, Arora R, Mishra S. Unusual
echocardiographic finding leading to diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration.
Images Paediatr Cardiol 2008;35:1-5
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| Max Heart and Vascular Institute, Saket, New Delhi, India | |
| Bronchopulmonary Sequestration | Heart defects, congenital | Echocardiography |
Identification of the anomalous arterial supply has therapeutic implication because the majority of infants clinically present large shunt lesions attributed to these channels in early infancy.4 The diagnosis in such cases is usually established by computed tomography (CT), angiography, magnetic resonance angiography and conventional angiography5. We report a 28 day old neonate who presented with features of large shunt lesion, in which echocardiography was instrumental in the diagnosis of a large collateral supplying the sequestrated lung.
Patient
A 28 day old term baby boy weighing 2.1 kg (birth weight – 2.7 kg)
presented to our hospital with a chief complaint of difficulty in feeding
and failure to thrive since birth.
On physical examination the baby had a respiratory rate of 66/min, heart
rate of 150/min and and was saturating at 94% in room air. Cardiovascular
examination revealed wide and fixed splitting of the second heart sound
and a pansystolic murmur at the left lower sternal border. He also had
significant hepatomegaly. X-ray chest was suggestive of cardiomegaly with
mild bronchovascular prominence. Echocardiography revealed situs solitus,
levocardia, atrio-ventricular and ventriculo-arterial concordance with
normal systemic venous drainage. The right lower pulmonary vein was draining
into the IVC. The remaining pulmonary veins were normally connected to
the left atrium (LA). A sub-costal coronal view done to delineate situs
showed an additional channel located anterior to the aorta (Fig 1).





Ultrasonography (USG) and subsequent plain CT chest and upper abdomen confirmed the presence of a sequestrated pulmonary segment in the left supra-diaphragmatic area.
This confirmed pulmonary sequestration with arterial supply from the abdominal aorta and draining into the portal venous system. CT angiography was planned, but deferred in view of the deranged renal function.
Discussion
Pulmonary sequestration with or without scimitar syndrome is a well recognized entity. The subset presenting early in life have typical manifestations of a shunt lesion.
Collaterals supplying the sequestrated tissue form a major extra-cardiac site for left to right shunting. These children are usually treated with either surgical or catheter guided occlusion of the collaterals. Those with late presentation generally have respiratory distress, chronic cough, difficulty in feeding, recurrent chest infections and failure to thrive as the presenting complaints. The diagnosis is most often made by radiological findings on X-ray , bronchography, CT, USG and MRA.5
Our patient presented with the classical triad of congestive heart failure, failure to thrive and a murmur suggestive of an acyanotic shunt lesion. In view of the deranged renal function, echocardiography was the only modality available to establish the diagnosis. In the absence of radiological scimitar sign and other associations, scimitar syndrome and scimitar variant were ruled out.
Echo images of the ascending channel were the only pointer towards the diagnosis in our reference case and this unique finding, to the best of our knowledge, has never been reported earlier in the literature.
References
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