“…Anomalies involved in this syndrome may appear in isolation or in combination, and thus the clinical presentation of this syndrome is variable, depending mainly on the presence of associated cardiac abnormalities. [1][2][3][4][5] "Scimitar syndrome", described in 1960, consists of variable combinations of hypoplasia of the right lung and right pulmonary artery, dextroposition of the heart, anomalous arterial supply to the right lower lobe, and anomalous pulmonary venous drainage of the right lung into the inferior caval vein 4 causing the characteristic "scimitar sign"a Turkish sword-shaped shadow along the right heart border on chest X-ray. Infant forms, presenting with respiratory insufficiency, heart failure, or pulmonary hypertension, are usually associated with systemic arterial supply (sequestrum), severe right lung hypoplasia, and abnormal drainage of the right pulmonary vein into the inferior caval vein.…”