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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 81, 569-573, Copyright © 1981 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
FT Thandroyen and RE Matisonn
The English literature contains 101 reported cases of cardiac fistula
following penetrating thoracic trauma. We describe an additional 10 cases
seen during a 7 year period. Six patients had ventricular septal defects,
another a ventricular septal defect together with a ventriculo- atrial
defect, two patients had aorta--right ventricular fistulous and the final
patient, a right coronary artery--right atrial fistula. This series
demonstrates several interesting features. First, the mode of clinical
presentation in four of the 10 patients was remarkable, because despite
severe cardiac injury they initially had neither symptoms nor signs of
cardiac decompensation. Second, only two of the seven patients hospitalized
immediately after the injury presented with cardiac murmurs suggestive of
cardiac fistula formation, whereas the remaining five exhibited cardiac
murmurs 1 to 21 days after initial cardiovascular examination. Third,
concomitant traumatic valvular lesions occurred frequently (five of 10
cases) but usually were not clinically detectable because of the similarity
and dominance of the fistulous murmur. Fourth, it was confirmed that the
type of cardiac fistula occurring most commonly following penetrating
cardiac trauma was a ventricular septal defect and that conservative
management of small ventricular septal defects is compatible with a
prolonged asymptomatic course. Finally, attention is drawn to the frequent
association of aortic incompetence with aorta--right heart fistulas and the
tendency for these fistulas to produce congestive cardiac failure.
ARTICLES
Penetrating thoracic trauma producing cardiac shunts
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