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The univentricular atrioventricular connection: getting to the root of a thorny problem

Authors :
Robert H. Anderson
James L. Wilkinson
Fergus J. Macartney
Michael Tynan
Anton E. Becker
Michael L. Rigby
Other departments
Source :
American journal of cardiology, 54(7), 822-828. Elsevier Inc.
Publication Year :
1984

Abstract

Most hearts described as "single ventricle" or "univentricular heart" possess 2 ventricular chambers, even though 1 is usually described as an "outlet chamber." This stems from the wide acceptance that the criterion of a single ventricle is the presence of a double-inlet atrioventricular (AV) connection. In recent years, using this criterion, an attempt was made to show how hearts with double-inlet right ventricle or "classic tricuspid atresia" were (in terms of ventricular morphology) just as univentricular as "single ventricle with outlet chamber." This attempt brought still further confusion to an already contentious topic. The root of the problem clearly is the injudicious use of the adjective "single" or "univentricular." Conventionally it is used to describe the ventricular mass. In most hearts with double-inlet connection it is not the ventricles that are univentricular; it is the AV connection. The concept of a univentricular AV connection, then, appropriately groups hearts with double-inlet along with those having absence of 1 AV connection. It distinguishes this entire group from those other hearts with biventricular AV connections (each atrium connected to its own ventricle). The term "univentricular AV connection" is thus a collective one for all those hearts in which the atria connect to only 1 ventricle. Confusion will be completely removed if individual hearts are described for what they are in terms of AV connection and ventricular morphology (for example, double-inlet left ventricle with rudimentary right ventricle rather than single ventricle with outlet chamber).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029149
Volume :
54
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e3d0a43fcf9b4d7a168a2767843b0535
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9149(84)80214-3