Early detection of congenital cardiovascular malformations in infancy
J. D. Rubin, C. Ferencz, J. I. Brenner, C. A. Neill and L. W. Perry
Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore 21201.
In an ongoing population-based study of congenital cardiovascular
malformations in the Baltimore-Washington, DC, area, 1527 affected infants
were ascertained from multiple sources during the years 1981 to 1984.
Ninety-eight percent were evaluated at a regional pediatric cardiology
center. Among the unreferred cases, in which the cardiac defect was
diagnosed only at autopsy, most infants died in the first week of life and
had associated problems, such as low birth weight, major noncardiac
malformations, or other life-threatening illnesses, but a few infants with
potentially remediable heart disease escaped clinical detection. Until
preventive measures become available, reduction of infant mortality due to
congenital cardiovascular malformations will continue to depend on early
recognition of signs of serious heart disease in infants and on effective
community-wide use of specialized cardiac services.