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Congenital Heart Disease

Truncus Arteriosus

Signs and Symptoms
Diagnosis
Treatment

Signs and Symptoms

Truncus arteriosus is when only one artery connects to the heart instead of two. This big blood vessel, called the truncus, connects with the heart through one big valve that allows blood from both the right and left ventricles to leave the heart. Blood passes into both the lungs and the body from this large vessel.

Below this abnormal valve, there also is nearly always an abnormal opening between the two lower heart chambers or ventricles called a ventricular septal defect or VSD, which allows oxygenated and non-oxygenated blood to mix.

The heart consists of four chambers: the two upper chambers, called atria, where blood enters the heart, and the two lower chambers, called ventricles, where blood is pumped out of the heart. The flow between the chambers is controlled by a set of valves that act as one-way doors.

Normally blood is pumped from the right side of the heart through the pulmonary valve and the pulmonary artery to the lungs, where the blood is filled with oxygen. From the lungs, the blood travels back down to the left atrium and left ventricle. The newly oxygenated blood then is pumped through another big blood vessel called the aorta to the rest of the body.

In truncus arteriosus, all of the blood is mixed in the one great artery.

Babies with truncus arteriosus usually don't get enough oxygen in their blood so they may have a bluish cast to their skin, especially around the nose and mouth. Their lungs also get too much blood, which could result in congestive heart failure. Congestive heart failure is when one or more chambers of the heart fail to keep up with the volume of blood flowing through them. Symptoms of congestive heart failure include breathlessness, rapid breathing, excessive sweating, and restlessness.

 

Reviewed by health care specialists at UCSF Children's Hospital.
Last updated May 8, 2007

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