Infants with truncus arteriosus need surgery to improve blood flow and oxygen levels. Many procedures or surgeries might be needed, especially as a child grows. Medicines might be given before surgery to help improve heart health.
Children and adults with surgically repaired truncus arteriosus need regular health checkups for life.
Medications
Some of the medicines that might be given before truncus arteriosus surgery include:
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Water pills. Also called diuretics, these medicines help the kidneys remove extra fluid from the body. Fluid buildup is a common symptom of heart failure.
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Positive inotropes.
These medicines help the heart pump stronger, which improves blood flow. They also help control blood pressure. Positive inotropes may be given by
IV to treat severe heart failure symptoms.
Surgery or other procedures
Most infants with truncus arteriosus have surgery within the first few weeks after birth. The specific type of surgery depends on the baby's condition. Usually, the baby's surgeon:
- Rebuilds the single large vessel and aorta to create a new, complete aorta.
- Separates the upper part of the pulmonary artery from the single large vessel.
- Uses a patch to close the hole between the two lower heart chambers.
- Places a tube and valve to connect the right lower heart chamber with the upper pulmonary artery. This creates a new, complete pulmonary artery.
The tube used to create the new pulmonary artery doesn't grow with a child. Follow-up surgeries are needed to replace the tube as the child grows.
Future surgeries may be done with a flexible tube called a catheter. This avoids the need for open-heart surgery. The health care provider inserts the catheter into a blood vessel in the groin and guides it to the heart. A new valve can be delivered through the catheter to the proper area.
Sometimes a small balloon at the tip of the catheter is inflated at the site of a blockage, widening a blocked artery. This procedure is called balloon angioplasty.
After truncus arteriosus surgery, a person needs lifelong follow-up care with a heart doctor specializing in congenital disease. This type of provider is called a congenital cardiologist.