Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T07:21:16.809Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

MRI shows limited mixing between systemic and pulmonary circulations in foetal transposition of the great arteries: a potential cause of in utero pulmonary vascular disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 June 2014

Prashob Porayette
Affiliation:
Department of Paediatrics, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Joshua F.P. van Amerom
Affiliation:
Department of Physiology & Experimental Medicine, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Shi-Joon Yoo
Affiliation:
Department of Physiology & Experimental Medicine, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Edgar Jaeggi
Affiliation:
Department of Paediatrics, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Christopher K Macgowan
Affiliation:
Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Mike Seed*
Affiliation:
Department of Paediatrics, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada Department of Physiology & Experimental Medicine, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
*
Correspondence to: Dr M. Seed, MD, Division of Paediatric Cardiology, Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1×8. Tel: +416 813 47654; ext 4067; Fax: +416 813 7547; E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objectives

To investigate the relationship between foetal haemodynamics and postnatal clinical presentation in patients with transposition of the great arteries using phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance.

Background

A severe and irreversible form of persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn occurs in up to 5% of patients with transposition and remains an important cause of morbidity and mortality in these infants. Restriction at the foramen ovale and ductus arteriosus has been identified as a risk factor for the development of pulmonary hypertension, and this can now be studied with magnetic resonance imaging using a new technique called metric optimised gating.

Methods

Blood flow was measured in the major vessels of four foetuses with transposition with intact ventricular septum (gestational age range: 35–38 weeks) and compared with values from 12 normal foetuses (median gestational age: 37 weeks; range: 34–40 weeks).

Results

We found significantly reduced flows in the ductus arteriosus (p<0.01) and foramen ovale (p=0.03) and increased combined ventricular output (p=0.01), ascending aortic (p=0.001), descending aortic (p=0.03), umbilical vein (p=0.03), and aorto-pulmonary collateral (p<0.001) flows in foetuses with transposition compared with normals. The foetus with the lowest foramen ovale shunt and highest aorto-pulmonary collateral flow developed fatal pulmonary vascular disease.

Conclusions

We found limited mixing between the systemic and pulmonary circulations in a small group of late-gestation foetuses with transposition. We propose that the resulting hypoxia of the pulmonary circulation could be the driver behind increased aorto-pulmonary collateral flow and contribute to the development of pulmonary vascular disease in some foetuses with transposition.

Type
Original Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution licence http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2014

Outcomes following the arterial switch operation for transposition of the great arteries are now excellent. However, up to 5% of patients with transposition are born with a severe and sometimes irreversible form of pulmonary vascular disease that can be fatal.Reference Kumar, Taylor, Sandor and Pattterson 1 Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn remains an important cause of early morbidity and mortality in transposition.Reference Roofthooft, Bergman, Waterbolk, Ebels, Bartelds and Berger 2 Prenatal constriction at the arterial duct and restriction at the oval foramen are associated with poor postnatal outcome and have been linked to the development of pulmonary vascular disease in utero in transposition,Reference Maeno, Kamenir, Sinclair, Smallhorn and Hornberger 3 , Reference Jouannic, Gavard and Fermont 4 although the aetiology of pulmonary vascular disease in transposition remains unclear.Reference Rudolph 5

Phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging is the non-invasive gold standard for the quantification of blood flow in children with congenital heart disease.Reference Beerbaum, Korperich, Barth, Esdorn, Gieseke and Meyer 6 , Reference Muthurangu, Taylor and Andriantsimiavona 7 Our group has developed a technique to perform accurate phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the foetus called metric optimised gating.Reference Jansz, Seed and van Amerom 8 Metric optimised gating achieves high-resolution phase-contrast MRI without needing an electrocardiographic signal by obtaining temporally oversampled data and optimising for minimum artefact over a sequence of reconstructions at different heart rates. The technique has been validated against conventionally triggered phase-contrast flow measurements using an in vivo simulation of foetal vessels, comparing sequential measurements made in the neck vessels of exercising adult volunteers using both techniques.Reference Seed, van Amerom and Yoo 9 The feasibility of using phase-contrast MRI with metric optimised gating for human foetal blood flow quantification is described in our previous publication, detailing the distribution of blood flow in 12 late-gestation normal foetuses.Reference Seed, van Amerom and Yoo 9 More recently, the technique has been successfully applied to foetuses with left-sided congenital heart disease.Reference Al Nafisi, van Amerom and Forsey 10 Our aim was to use phase-contrast MRI with metric optimised gating to investigate the haemodynamic substrate for the development of pulmonary vascular disease in utero in foetuses with transposition.

Materials and methods

Foetal study

The SickKids research ethics board approved this study and informed consent was obtained for foetal MRI. A total of four consecutive pregnant mothers diagnosed with transposition with intact ventricular septum at our institution underwent MRI with phase-contrast cine imaging with metric optimised gating according to our previously published techniqueReference Seed, van Amerom and Yoo 9 (foetal gestational age range: 35–38 weeks). We used a contemporary group of 12 normal foetuses as our control group (median gestational age: 37 weeks; range: 34–40 weeks).Reference Seed, van Amerom and Yoo 9 Flows were directly measured in the ascending aorta, descending aorta, main pulmonary artery, superior caval vein, umbilical vein, arterial duct, and right and left pulmonary arteries. Pulmonary blood flow was calculated as the sum of left and right pulmonary artery flow. Flow in the descending aorta at the diaphragm was assumed equal to flow in the suprahepatic inferior caval vein such that oval foramen flow was calculated by subtracting the venous return to the right ventricle, which is the sum of the superior caval vein and descending aortic flows, from the right ventricular output. The right ventricular output is the flow in the great vessel connected to the right ventricle, which is the ascending aorta in transposition, or main pulmonary artery in normals. Aorto-pulmonary collateral flow was estimated by subtracting descending aortic flow at the diaphragm from flow in the proximal descending aorta, which was calculated from the sum of the arterial ductal flow and aortic isthmus flow. Aortic isthmus flow was calculated as the ascending aorta minus superior caval vein flow. The flow measurements were indexed to the foetal weight, based on segmentation of the foetus from a three-dimensional steady state-free precession acquisition, as previously described.Reference Seed, van Amerom and Yoo 9 Inter-observer variability for the flow measurements made in both groups was assessed by comparing the flow measurements made by two observers who were blinded to each other’s results using Pearson’s correlation and a Bland Altman plot.

All subjects were followed up to 1 year of age when a chart review was conducted and information about surgical procedures, death, or serious morbidity was collected.

Statistical methods

The foetal flows are expressed in ml/min and indexed to the foetal weight in kg. Foetal flows are also expressed as percentages of the combined ventricular output, which is calculated from the sum of the ascending aorta and main pulmonary artery flows, plus 3% for coronary flow based on foetal lamb measurements.Reference Rudolph 11 Owing to the small number of foetuses with transposition, a non-parametric statistical analysis was used to compare flows in transposition versus normal controls (two-tailed unpaired Mann-Whitney test). P-values<0.05 were considered significant.

Results

Foetal study

Measurement of blood flow in all major foetal vessels was possible in all foetuses. An example of a phase-contrast MRI acquisition made in the descending aorta of a foetus with transposition at 37 weeks’ gestation is shown in Supplementary video S1. Flows are shown in Tables 1 and 2, and Figure 1. There was a high level of agreement between the two observers (r=0.99, p<0.001) with a negligible bias of −4.73±30.18 ml/minute across a range from 145 to 1150 ml/minute.

Figure 1 Flows in foetuses with transposition versus normal hearts. Normal foetal flows (black bars) are compared with transposition of the great arteries (TGA) (coloured symbols) in units of ( a ) ml/minute/kg, and ( b ) as percentage of combined ventricular output (CVO) (# denotes calculated flows). Significance level is indicated (*p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001). AAo=ascending aorta; APC=aortopulmonary collateral; DA=arterial duct; DAo=descending aorta; FO=oval foramen; MPA=main pulmonary artery; PBF=pulmonary blood flow; SVC=superior caval vein; UV=umbilical vein.

Table 1 Flows in 12 foetuses with normal hearts and four foetuses with transposition of the great arteries.

AAo=ascending aorta; APC=aorto-pulmonary collateral; CVO=combined ventricular output; DA=ductus arteriosus; DAo=descending aorta; EFW=estimated foetal weight; FO=foramen ovale; GA=gestational age; MPA=main pulmonary artery; PBF=pulmonary blood flow (sum of branch pulmonary arteries); SVC=superior vena cava; TGA=transposition of the great arteries; UV=umbilical vein

Flows were measured by phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance with metric optimised gating and indexed by weight

* Calculated values

** Two-tailed unpaired Mann-Whitney test

Table 2 Flows in 12 foetuses with normal hearts and four foetuses with transposition of the great arteries.

AAo=ascending aorta; APC=aortopulmonary collateral; CVO= combined ventricular output; DA=ductus arteriosus; DAo=descending aorta; FO=foramen ovale; MPA=main pulmonary artery; PBF=pulmonary blood flow; SVC=superior vena cava; TGA=transposition of the great arteries; UV=umbilical vein

Flows were measured by phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance with metric optimised gating and expressed as a percentage of the combined ventricular volume

* Calculated values

** Two-tailed unpaired Mann-Whitney test

The median combined ventricular output (p=0.001), ascending aortic (p=0.01), descending aortic (p=0.03), and umbilical venous (p=0.03) flows were increased in foetuses with transposition compared with normals. Median flows in the arterial duct (p<0.01) and oval foramen (p=0.03) were significantly lower in foetuses with transposition. When flow was expressed as a percentage of the combined ventricular output, we also found significantly lower median flows in the arterial duct and across the oval foramen, and higher flow in the ascending aorta in transposition foetuses. In addition, we found significantly reduced flow in the main pulmonary artery (p<0.001) and superior caval vein (p=0.02) in transposition. There was no significant difference between descending aortic and umbilical venous flow between the two groups in terms of percentage of the combined ventricular output. There was no significant difference in pulmonary blood flow in ml/min/kg or as a percentage of combined ventricular output between the two groups.

At 114 ml/minute/kg or 15% of the combined ventricular output, the median aorto-pulmonary collateral flow was significantly higher in the transposition group than the median aorto-pulmonary collateral flow of 11.5 ml/minute/kg or 2% of the combined ventricular output in the normal group (p=0.001).

Clinical outcomes

Each of the four transposition foetuses underwent emergency balloon atrial septostomy at birth followed by an arterial switch operation in the neonatal period. Of the four patients, three made rapid progress and had no residual lesions or significant morbidity at 1 year of age. Transposition subject 2 continued to struggle in the postoperative period and was found to have pulmonary hypertension. A cardiac catheterisation at 6 weeks of age revealed a pulmonary vascular resistance of 25 Wood units∙m2 and the patient died of right ventricular failure 6 months later. The aortogram performed during this catheterisation confirmed the presence of enlarged bronchial arteries, shown in Supplementary video S2.

Discussion

It has been suggested that the normal streaming of well-oxygenated blood from the umbilical vein across the oval foramen would result in increased pulmonary blood flow and oxygen mediated arterial ductal constriction in foetuses with transposition, because in transposition the left ventricle is connected to the pulmonary artery.Reference Rudolph 5 In foetal lambs, a small increase in arterial oxygen saturation resulted in a threefold increase in pulmonary blood flow and increase in left atrial pressure.Reference Konduri, Gervasio and Theodorou 12 The increased pulmonary venous return associated with the drop in pulmonary vascular resistance resulting from higher oxygen saturations in the pulmonary arteries might help to explain the reduced oval foramen shunting that we observed in transposition foetuses. Reduced arterial ductal flow in transposition compared with normals may be a consequence of the lower output of the left ventricle than the right ventricle in the normal foetal circulation.Reference Seed, van Amerom and Yoo 9 , Reference Rudolph 11 The dominance of the right ventricular contribution to the combined ventricular output is likely to reflect greater preload to the right heart in the foetal circulation, and this may explain the increased ascending aortic flow we found in transposition foetuses, where the right ventricle supplies the ascending aorta.

Figure 2 depicts our hypothesis regarding the development of foetal pulmonary vascular disease in transposition. In the initial phase, there is pulmonary vasodilation resulting from the discordant ventriculo-arterial connections, with richly oxygenated blood from the umbilical vein streamed to the left heart and pulmonary arteries. However, the high pulmonary blood flow could then reduce the oval foramen shunt and the relatively low volume and high oxygen content of the blood now crossing the arterial duct could result in ductal narrowing. With reduced oval foramen and arterial duct shunts, the same blood would circulate between the lungs and left heart, with newly oxygenated blood from the placenta bypassing the left heart and passing directly to the systemic circulation. Under these circumstances, the blood entering the pulmonary circulation could become severely hypoxemic, as shown in the second phase of Figure 2. This is not unlike the postnatal situation in transposition, where there is frequently systemic hypoxia because of limited mixing between the systemic and pulmonary circulations. However, in the foetus, the pulmonary side would become cyanosed, as in foetal life the site of gaseous exchange is the placenta and not the lungs. The lower superior caval vein flow as a percentage of the combined ventricular output found in these foetuses with transposition could reflect a high oxygen content of the blood in the ascending aorta, the converse of the cerebral vasodilation known to occur during hypoxia as part of the brain-sparing response,Reference Cohn, Sacks, Heymann and Rudolph 13 as shown in the third phase of Figure 2. In a final step, the resulting gradient between the descending aorta and pulmonary arterial blood oxygen content could drive the overdevelopment of the bronchial circulation that is frequently present in newborns with transposition, therefore exposing the distal pulmonary arteries to increased blood pressure.

Figure 2 Potential mechanism for development of foetal pulmonary vascular disease in transposition of the great arteries. Initial pulmonary vasodilation because of streaming of oxygen from the umbilical vein (UV) to the pulmonary arteries results in oval foramen (FO) restriction and arterial ductal (DA) constriction, producing “isolation” and hypoxia of the pulmonary circulation, which in turn drives increased aorto-pulmonary collateral (APC) flow. AAo=ascending aorta; DAo=descending aorta; GI=gastrointestinal; IVC=inferior caval vein; LA=left atrium; LHV=left hepatic vein; LPV=left portal vein; LV=left ventricle; MPA=main pulmonary artery; PBF=pulmonary blood flow; RA=right atrium; RHV=right hepatic vein; RPV=right portal vein; RV=right ventricle; SVC=superior caval vein; UA=umbilical arteries.

Previous studies have found evidence of increased aorto-pulmonary collateral blood flow in transposition. One series found enlarged bronchial arteries in 46% of infants with transposition.Reference Wernovsky, Bridges, Mandell, Castaneda and Perry 14 Increased in utero aorto-pulmonary collateral flow has also been demonstrated in transposition by echocardiography.Reference Himeno, Maeno, Kamura and Matshuishi 15 Furthermore, the presence of enlarged bronchial arteries in infants with transposition has been associated with the early development of pulmonary vascular disease.Reference Aghaji, Friedberg, Burlingame and Litwin 16 Although increased aorto-pulmonary collateral flow may improve the oxygen content of pulmonary arterial blood in foetuses with transposition, it may expose the small pulmonary arteries to increased blood pressure. Ductal constriction, a known cause of foetal pulmonary vascular disease,Reference Gewillig, Brown and De Catte 17 may also elevate pulmonary pressures. Ductal constriction has been demonstrated in foetuses with transposition who went on to present with signs of pulmonary hypertension at birth.Reference Maeno, Kamenir, Sinclair, Smallhorn and Hornberger 3 On the basis of our observations, the foetal pulmonary arteries in transposition could potentially be exposed to a combination of hypoxia and hypertension. This combination is known to cause pulmonary vascular disease in postnatal patients with congenital heart disease.Reference Rudolph 11 Furthermore, hypoxia and ductal constriction both cause pulmonary vascular disease in foetal rats, a combination of the two results in the most severe pulmonary hypertensive changes.Reference Xu, Gu, Wu, Li and Du 18

In our group of foetuses with transposition, the foetus with the lowest oval foramen shunt and highest aorto-pulmonary collateral flow developed fatal pulmonary vascular disease. The other three foetuses with transposition with good outcomes also showed reduced oval foramen and arterial ductal shunts and increased aorto-pulmonary collateral flow. However, none of these foetuses went on to develop pulmonary vascular disease, suggesting that additional circulatory or biological factors are likely to contribute to the development of pulmonary vascular disease in these patients. However, in keeping with another recent echocardiographic study,Reference Punn and Silvermann 19 our measurements provide further evidence for an association between requirement of urgent atrial septostomy at birth and reduced shunting at the oval foramen and arterial ductal flow in foetuses with transposition. This is important because the accurate identification of foetuses with transposition at risk of developing pulmonary vascular disease could guide the timing of delivery and provide a potential target for foetal treatment. For example, improved mixing between the systemic and pulmonary circulations could potentially be encouraged by foetal interventions to open the atrial septum. These have been used to good effect in the setting of hypoplastic left heart syndrome with an intact or highly restrictive atrial septum in an attempt to halt the progression of pulmonary vascular disease resulting from pulmonary venous obstruction in utero and avoid the severe neonatal hypoxia that otherwise occurs.Reference Chaturvedi, Ryan, Seed, van Arsdell and Jaeggi 20 , Reference Marshall, Van der velde and Tworetzky 21 Such an approach has been suggested in the setting of transposition with an intact atrial septum,Reference Chiou, Moon-Grady, Rodriguez, Konia, Parrish and Milstein 22 although we are not aware this has ever been attempted. It has also been suggested that occlusion of the ductus venosus in foetuses with transposition might prevent the pulmonary vasodilation, which may initiate the pathway towards pulmonary vascular disease in utero.Reference Rudolph 5

We are uncertain of the reason for the higher combined ventricular output seen in the transposition foetuses compared with controls in this study. The increased cardiac output would appear to be the cause of the high descending aortic and umbilical venous flow, as these were normal proportions of the combined ventricular output. The increased combined ventricular output in transposition is in contrast with the 20% reduction we found in foetuses with left-sided obstructive congenital heart disease,Reference Al Nafisi, van Amerom and Forsey 10 but similar to the increased combined ventricular output that has been observed in foetuses with a drop in afterload associated with congenital absence of the ductus venous associated with anomalous drainage of the umbilical vein.Reference Jaeggi, Fouron and Hornberger 23 It is possible that the expected streaming of oxygenated blood across the oval foramen could result in an increase in combined ventricular output associated with a reduction in afterload for both ventricles resulting from oxygen-mediated pulmonary and cerebral vasodilation. Regardless of the cause, the observation of high flow and potentially high oxygen delivery to the lower body is in keeping with the macrosomia previously observed in newborns with transposition.Reference Mehrizi and Drash 24

Study limitations

The main limitation of this study is the small number of subjects. Although our small group of foetuses with transposition had similar patterns of distribution of blood flow in utero, only one developed severe irreversible pulmonary vascular disease. We believe there are other patterns of flow distribution in foetuses with transposition, and any potential clinical significance of these will only become apparent with larger numbers. Although the conclusions about the oxygen content of the blood in the systemic and pulmonary circulation in our subjects are the logical development of our own and previous observations, they remain speculative. However, the development of foetal blood oxygen-level-dependent MRIReference Sorensen, Peters and Simonsen 25 and foetal magnetic resonance oximetryReference Wedegartner, Kooijman and Yamamura 26 offer a potential approach for investigating this hypothesis. Furthermore, we believe the novelty of this approach and the significant clinical outcome of one of our preliminary subjects warrant the reporting of this initial sample.

Conclusion

In this study comparing the distribution of blood flow in a small group of foetuses with transposition with controls, we found reduced shunting across the oval foramen and arterial duct and increased aorto-pulmonary collateral flow in foetuses with transposition. One subject developed fatal pulmonary vascular disease following the arterial switch, raising the possibility that poor mixing between the systemic and pulmonary circulations in utero could be associated with early changes in pulmonary vascular development.

Acknowledgement

The authors would like to thank Luke Itani for his illustration in Figure 2.

Financial Support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflicts of Interest

None.

Ethical Standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council for Canada, Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans 1998 (with 2000, 2002 and 2005 amendments) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008, and has been approved by the Hospital for Sick Children Research Ethics Board.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1047951114000870.

References

1. Kumar, A, Taylor, GP, Sandor, GGS, Pattterson, MWH. Pulmonary vascular disease in neonates with transposition of the great arteries and intact ventricular septum. Br Heart J 1993; 69: 442445.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2. Roofthooft, MT, Bergman, KA, Waterbolk, TW, Ebels, T, Bartelds, B, Berger, RM. Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn with transposition of the great arteries. Ann Thorac Surg 2007; 83: 14461450.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3. Maeno, YV, Kamenir, SA, Sinclair, B, Smallhorn, JF, Hornberger, LK. Prenatal features of ductus arteriosus constriction and restrictive foramen ovale in d-transpostion of the great arteries. Circulation 1999; 99: 12091214.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4. Jouannic, JM, Gavard, L, Fermont, L, et al. Sensitivity and specificity of prenatal features of physiological shunts to predict neonatal clinical status in transposition of the great arteries. Circulation 2004; 110: 17431746.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5. Rudolph, AM. Aortopulmonary transposition in the fetus: speculation on pathophysiology and therapy. Pediatr Res 2007; 61: 375380.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6. Beerbaum, P, Korperich, H, Barth, P, Esdorn, H, Gieseke, J, Meyer, H. Noninvasive quantification of left-to-right shunt in pediatric patients – phase-contrast cine magnetic resonance imaging compared with invasive oximetry. Circulation 2001; 103: 24762482.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7. Muthurangu, V, Taylor, A, Andriantsimiavona, R, et al. Novel technique for measuring pulmonary vascular resistance using simultaneous invasive pressure and phase contrast MRI. Circulation 2004; 110: 826834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
8. Jansz, MS, Seed, M, van Amerom, JF, et al. Metric optimized gating for fetal cardiac MRI. Magn Reson Med 2010; 64: 13041314.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9. Seed, M, van Amerom, J, Yoo, SJ, et al. Feasibility of quantification of the distribution of blood flow in the normal human fetal circulation using CMR: a cross-sectional study. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 2012; 14: 79.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
10. Al Nafisi, B, van Amerom, J, Forsey, J, et al. Fetal circulation in left-sided congenital heart disease measured by cardiovascular magnetic resonance: a case-control study. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 2013; 15: 65.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
11. Rudolph, AM. The fetal circulation. In: Rudolph AM (ed) Congenital Diseases of the Heart – Clinical Pathological Considerations. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester, UK, 2009: 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12. Konduri, GG, Gervasio, CT, Theodorou, AA. Role of adenosine triphosphate and adenosine in oxygen-induced pulmonary vasodilation in fetal lambs. Pediatr Res 1993; 33: 533539.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13. Cohn, H, Sacks, E, Heymann, M, Rudolph, A. Cardiovascular responses to hypoxemia and acidemia in fetal lambs. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1974; 120: 817824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
14. Wernovsky, G, Bridges, ND, Mandell, VS, Castaneda, AR, Perry, SB. Enlarged bronchial arteries after early repair of transposition of the great arteries. J Am Coll Cardiol 1993; 21: 465470.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
15. Himeno, W, Maeno, Y, Kamura, T, Matshuishi, T. Enlarged bronchial arteries in a fetus with transposition of the great arteries and intact ventricular septum. Pediatr Cardiol 2003; 24: 172174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16. Aghaji, MA, Friedberg, DZ, Burlingame, MW, Litwin, SB. Hypoxemia and pulmonary hyperperfusion due to systemic collateral arteries after total repair of transposition of the great arteries. J Cardiovasc Surg 1989; 30: 338341.Google ScholarPubMed
17. Gewillig, M, Brown, SC, De Catte, L, et al. Premature foetal closure of the arterial duct: clinical presentations and outcome. Eur Heart J 2009; 30: 15301536.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
18. Xu, XF, Gu, WZ, Wu, XL, Li, RY, Du, LZ. Fetal pulmonary vascular remodeling in a rat model induced by hypoxia and indomethacin. J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med 2011; 24: 172182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19. Punn, R, Silvermann, N. Fetal predictors of urgent balloon atrial septostomy in neonates with complete transposition. J Am Soc Echocardiog 2011; 24: 425430.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20. Chaturvedi, RR, Ryan, G, Seed, M, van Arsdell, G, Jaeggi, ET. Fetal stenting of the atrial septum: technique and initial results in cardiac lesions with left atrial hypertension. Int J Cardiol 2013; 168: 20292036.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
21. Marshall, A, Van der velde, M, Tworetzky, W, et al. Creation of an atrial septal defect in utero of fetuses with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and intact or highly restrictive atrial septum. Circulation 2004; 110: 253258.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
22. Chiou, H, Moon-Grady, A, Rodriguez, R, Konia, T, Parrish, M, Milstein, J. A rare lethal combination of premature closure of the foramen ovale and d-transposition of the great arteries with intact ventricular septum. Int J Cardiol 2008; 130: e57e59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
23. Jaeggi, ET, Fouron, JC, Hornberger, LK, et al. Agenesis of the ductus venosus that is associated with extrahepatic umbilical vein drainage: prenatal features and clinical outcome. Am J Obset Gynecol 2002; 187: 10311037.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
24. Mehrizi, A, Drash, A. Birth weight of infants with cyanotic and acyanotic congenital malformations of the heart. J Pediat 1961; 59: 715718.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
25. Sorensen, A, Peters, D, Simonsen, C, et al. Changes in human fetal oxygenation during maternal hyperoxia as estimated by BOLD MRI. Prenatal Diagnosis 2013; 33: 141145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
26. Wedegartner, U, Kooijman, H, Yamamura, J, et al. In vivo MRI measurement of fetal blood oxygen saturation in cardiac ventricles of fetal sheep: a feasibility study. Magn Reson Med 2010; 64: 3241.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1 Flows in foetuses with transposition versus normal hearts. Normal foetal flows (black bars) are compared with transposition of the great arteries (TGA) (coloured symbols) in units of (a) ml/minute/kg, and (b) as percentage of combined ventricular output (CVO) (# denotes calculated flows). Significance level is indicated (*p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001). AAo=ascending aorta; APC=aortopulmonary collateral; DA=arterial duct; DAo=descending aorta; FO=oval foramen; MPA=main pulmonary artery; PBF=pulmonary blood flow; SVC=superior caval vein; UV=umbilical vein.

Figure 1

Table 1 Flows in 12 foetuses with normal hearts and four foetuses with transposition of the great arteries.

Figure 2

Table 2 Flows in 12 foetuses with normal hearts and four foetuses with transposition of the great arteries.

Figure 3

Figure 2 Potential mechanism for development of foetal pulmonary vascular disease in transposition of the great arteries. Initial pulmonary vasodilation because of streaming of oxygen from the umbilical vein (UV) to the pulmonary arteries results in oval foramen (FO) restriction and arterial ductal (DA) constriction, producing “isolation” and hypoxia of the pulmonary circulation, which in turn drives increased aorto-pulmonary collateral (APC) flow. AAo=ascending aorta; DAo=descending aorta; GI=gastrointestinal; IVC=inferior caval vein; LA=left atrium; LHV=left hepatic vein; LPV=left portal vein; LV=left ventricle; MPA=main pulmonary artery; PBF=pulmonary blood flow; RA=right atrium; RHV=right hepatic vein; RPV=right portal vein; RV=right ventricle; SVC=superior caval vein; UA=umbilical arteries.

Porayette Supplementary Material

Video S1

Download Porayette Supplementary Material(Video)
Video 5.1 MB

Porayette Supplementary Material

Video S2

Download Porayette Supplementary Material(Video)
Video 1.6 MB