Browse by author
Lookup NU author(s): Professor Bob Anderson
Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.
It is frequent, in the current era, to encounter congenital cardiac malformations described in terms of "cor triatriatum''. But can hearts be truly found with three atrial chambers? The morphological method, emphasised by Van Praagh et al, states that structures within the heart should be defined on the basis of their most constant components. In the atrial chambers, it is the appendages that are the most constant components, and to the best of our knowledge, hearts can only possess two appendages, which can be of either right or left morphology. The hearts described on the basis of "cor triatriatum'', nonetheless, can also be analysed on the basis of division of either the morphologically right or the morphologically left atriums. In this review, we provide a description of cardiac embryology, showing how each of the atrial chambers possesses part of the embryological body, along with an appendage, a vestibule, a venous component, and a septum that separates them. We then show how it is, indeed, the case that the hearts described in terms of "cor triatriatum'' can be readily understood on the basis of division of these atrial components. In the right atrium, it is the venous valves that divide the chamber. In the left atrium, it is harder to provide an explanation for the shelf that produces atrial division. We also contrast the classic examples of the divided atrial chambers with the vestibular shelf that produces supravalvar stenosis in the morphologically left atrium, showing that this form of obstruction needs to be distinguished from the fibrous shelves producing intravalvar obstruction.
Author(s): Bharucha T, Spicer DE, Mohun TJ, Black D, Henry GW, Anderson RH
Publication type: Review
Publication status: Published
Journal: Cardiology in the Young
Year: 2015
Volume: 25
Issue: 2
Pages: 193-207
Print publication date: 01/02/2015
Online publication date: 13/05/2014
Acceptance date: 18/03/2014
ISSN (print): 1047-9511
ISSN (electronic): 1467-1107
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1047951114000572
DOI: 10.1017/S1047951114000572
PubMed id: 24820379