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Zain Z. Diffuse pulmonary arteriovenous
malformation - a case report. Images Paediatr Cardiol 2004;18:13-16
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Department of Paediatric Cardiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur |
She was admitted at the age of three months for fever, poor feeding and increasing cyanosis. Examination revealed a centrally cyanosed child with an oxygen saturation of 65% in room air, rising to 75% in oxygen enriched air. There were no heart murmurs and the lung fields had vesicular breath sounds.
Haemoglobin level was 23.9 g/dl with haematocrit of 0.74. Arterial blood had a PaO2 of 35 mmHg. Methaemoglobin and HB electrophoresis were normal. Chest X-ray showed prominent peripheral pulmonary vasculature and pulmonary artery (figure 1).
The electrocardiogram showed right axis deviation and right ventricular hypertrophy. Echocardiogram showed normal intracardiac structure and connections. The foramen ovale was patent with a left to right shunt. The pulmonary artery was enlarged. There was no significant valvular regurgitation. A contrast echocardiogram showed rapid return of contrast into the left atrium less than 5 seconds after it is seen in the right atrium (figure 2) and a diagnosis of diffuse-type pulmonary arteriovenous malformation (PAVM) was made.
A thoracic CT scan was performed which showed prominent large vessels in the lower left lower lobe (figure 3) but not in any other organs. Cardiac catheterization showed normal pressures with desaturation in the left sided chambers. Pulmonary angiography showed multiple diffuse vascular lesions in the peripheries consistent with arteriovenous malformation (figure 4).
Patients may be asymptomatic in the milder forms, or have respiratory distress and haemoptysis in the severe types. The right to left shunt may be complicated by polycythaemia, cyanosis and cerebral abcesses.
The gold standard in diagnosis is pulmonary angiogram showing abnormal peripheral vascular formations that may be either localized or diffuse. Contrast echocardiography has been proven useful and accurate in screening for PAVM.2 Due to the rapid transit of blood flow through the pulmonary veins into the capillaries, the left atrium is seen to be filled early with contrast (within 2-5 seconds) following contrast passage through the right atrium. Multi-slice computed tomography is also useful.3
Treatment of localized PAVMs includes surgical
lobectomy or transcatheter embolization using coils. There is no definitive
treatment for the diffuse type.
References
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