Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/3940
Title: A review of congenital heart block
Authors: Friedman, Deborah M.
Glickstein, J.
Duncanson, L.J.
Buyon, Jill P.
Keywords: Heart block
Congenital heart disease
Issue Date: 2003
Publisher: Images in Paediatric Cardiology
Citation: Images in Paediatric Cardiology. 2003, Vol.5(3), p. 36-48
Abstract: Congenital heart block is a rare disorder. It has an incidence of about 1 in 22,000 live births. It may be associated with high mortality and morbidity. This should generate a high index of suspicion for early diagnosis and aggressive therapy when appropriate. The congenital heart block associated with neonatal lupus is considered a form of passively acquired autoimmune disease in which maternal autoantibodies to the intracellular ribonucleoproteins Ro (SS-A) and La (SS-B), cross the placenta and injure the previously normal fetal heart. Women with serum titers of anti-Ro antibody carry a 3% risk of having a child with neonatal lupus syndrome. Recurrence rates are about 18%. We believe that serial echocardiograms should be acquired so that early diagnosis is made and aggressive therapy administered, if signs of conduction system disease such as PR interval prolongation by Doppler are found, so as to optimize the outcome. Establishment of guidelines for therapy have been set empirically, should signs of congenital heart block develop. Those patients whose congenital heart block is associated with structural heart disease have a higher morbidity and mortality, which is determined more by the underlying structural congenital heart disease than it is by the need for a pacemaker per se.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/3940
Appears in Collections:IPC, Volume 5, Issue 3
IPC, Volume 5, Issue 3

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