Article contents
The hows and whys of intraoperative imaging
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2005
Extract
The detail of cardiac morphology, with its subtle complexity and variation, is difficult to convey to colleagues and families, and even more time-consuming to learn. The terminology is occasionally unresolved, visual representations challenging, and there is often a mismatch between the presentation of the defect by the morphologist, the echocardiographic impression gained by the cardiologist, and the view obtained by the surgeon in the operating room. It can be said, therefore, that size, complexity and three-dimensional configuration, the three most important concepts to grasp when describing the congenitally malformed heart, are seldom touched upon with traditional illustrations or texts.
- Type
- PART 6: CARING FOR PATIENTS WITH CONGENITAL CARDIAC DISEASE
- Information
- Cardiology in the Young , Volume 15 , Supplement S1: Controversies Concerning the Ventriculo-Arterial Junctions and Other Topics , February 2005 , pp. 179 - 183
- Copyright
- © 2005 Cambridge University Press
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