Children with low-flow congenital heart lesions are reported to have an increased incidence of pulmonary tuberculosis. The aim of this study was to investigate if children with congenital heart disease have an increased incidence of pulmonary tuberculosis and to determine if patients with certain heart conditions are more susceptible to pulmonary tuberculosis than others. This retrospective study over a 6-year period showed that pulmonary tuberculosis was 2.5-fold more common in children with congenital heart disease than in normal children from the same community. Children with congenital pulmonary stenosis had a prevalence equal to those with acyanotic (ventricular and atrial septal defects) and cyanotic (transposition of the great arteries) high-flow heart lesions, whereas there were no cases of tuberculosis in children with low-flow cyanotic heart lesions such as tetralogy of Fallot. Cardiac surgery had to be postponed as a result of pulmonary tuberculosis in 7.2% of all patients in whom it was required. Over the 6-year period of the study, cardiac surgery had to be delayed in 60% of cases with pulmonary tuberculosis and congenital heart lesions so antituberculosis therapy could be completed. Physicians treating children with congenital heart lesions should maintain a high index of suspicion for the development of pulmonary tuberculosis, especially in those with acyanotic and cyanotic high-flow lesions and pulmonary stenosis.
The ventricle of a functionally univentricular heart is known to be dilated, hypertrophic and hypocontractile before and after completion of a Fontan type of circuit. Ventricular dysfunction can be due to the congenital malformation itself, previous surgical conditions, or the very abnormal working conditions of the ventricle at the various stages of palliation. Because of the very different types of ventricle, it remains difficult to assess size, shape, hypertrophy, stress, strain, contraction and relaxation. The ventricle after birth tries to adapt to different and very abnormal circulations, evolving from overloaded and overstretched while shunted, to underloaded and overgrown after a Fontan type of circulation.
Through a survey of more than 20 patients with a specific subgroup of autosomal recessive congenital cutis laxa (ARCL), namely ATP6V0A2-related cutis laxa, we noted that the clinical findings on three patients included pretibial pseudo-ecchymotic skin lesions very similar to those found in classical Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. The finding is apparently age-related, occurring during the second decade in two of the three patients.
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