# Fatal Congenital Heart Disease in a Postpartum Woman

**Authors:** Corina Cinezan, Camelia Bianca Rus, Mihaela Mirela Muresan, Ovidiu Laurean Pop

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15151952 · Diagnostics · 2025-08-04

## TL;DR

A woman with an untreated heart defect from childhood died three days after giving birth due to severe complications.

## Contribution

This case highlights the risks of pregnancy in untreated congenital heart disease and the importance of early treatment.

## Key findings

- The patient had a complete common atrioventricular canal defect with severe pulmonary hypertension.
- Vaginal delivery was chosen over cesarean due to lower risk, but the patient died three days postpartum.
- Autopsy confirmed the congenital heart defect and its severe complications.

## Abstract

The image represents the post-mortem heart of a 28-year-old female patient, diagnosed in childhood with complete common atrioventricular canal defect. At time of diagnosis, the family refused surgery, as did the patient during her adulthood. Despite being advised against pregnancy, she became pregnant. On presentation to hospital, she was cyanotic, with clubbed fingers, and hemodynamically unstable, in sinus rhythm, with Eisenmenger syndrome and respiratory failure partially responsive to oxygen. During pregnancy, owing to systemic vasodilatation, the right-to-left shunt is increased, with more severe cyanosis and low cardiac output. Echocardiography revealed the complete common atrioventricular canal defect, with a single atrioventricular valve with severe regurgitation, right ventricular hypertrophy, pulmonary artery dilatation, severe pulmonary hypertension and a hypoplastic left ventricle. The gestational age at delivery was 38 weeks. She gave birth to a healthy boy, with an Apgar score of 10. The vaginal delivery was chosen by an interdisciplinary team. The cesarean delivery and the anesthesia were considered too risky compared to vaginal delivery. Three days later, the patient died. The autopsy revealed hepatomegaly, a greatly hypertrophied right ventricle with a purplish clot ascending the dilated pulmonary arteries and a hypoplastic left ventricle with a narrowed chamber. A single valve was observed between the atria and ventricles, making all four heart chambers communicate, also insufficiently developed interventricular septum and its congenital absence in the cranial third. These morphological changes indicate the complete common atrioventricular canal defect, with right ventricular dominance, which is a rare and impressive malformation that requires mandatory treatment in early childhood in order for the condition to be solved.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Eisenmenger syndrome (MONDO:0019944), pulmonary hypertension (MONDO:0005149), respiratory failure (MONDO:0021113)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** atrioventricular canal defect (MESH:C562831), Congenital Heart Disease (MESH:D006330), Eisenmenger syndrome (MESH:D004541), low cardiac output (MESH:D002303), cyanosis (MESH:D003490), hepatomegaly (MESH:D006529), hypoplastic left ventricle (MESH:D020257), pulmonary artery dilatation (MESH:D000071079), respiratory failure (MESH:D012131), right ventricular hypertrophy (MESH:D017380), pulmonary hypertension (MESH:D006976)
- **Chemicals:** atrioventricular (-), oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346633/full.md

## References

4 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346633/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346633