Congenital Heart Disease Treatment in Hyderabad | Germanten

Congenital Heart Disease Treatment


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Congenital Heart Disease Treatment

Congenital heart disease (CHD) refers to structural abnormalities of the heart that are present from birth. These defects arise during fetal development when the heart's complex four-chamber structure fails to form correctly. Congenital heart disease is the most common birth defect, affecting approximately 8 to 10 in every 1,000 live births in India, with an estimated 180,000 to 200,000 new cases each year.

Medical and surgical advances over the past four decades mean that over 90% of children born with congenital heart disease now survive into adulthood. This has created a large and growing population of adults living with congenital heart conditions that require ongoing specialist cardiac care. At Germanten Hospital, our cardiology team manages both newly presenting congenital defects in adults and long-term follow-up for patients who received treatment in childhood.

Common Types of Congenital Heart Defects

Atrial Septal Defect (ASD)

A hole in the wall (septum) between the two upper chambers of the heart (atria). Allows blood to flow from the left atrium to the right atrium, increasing the volume load on the right heart. The most common congenital defect presenting in adults. Often asymptomatic until middle age but can cause arrhythmias, right heart enlargement, and eventually pulmonary hypertension if left untreated.

Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD)

A hole in the wall between the two lower chambers (ventricles). The most common congenital heart defect overall. Small VSDs may close spontaneously in childhood. Large VSDs cause a significant shunt, left heart volume overload, and require closure. Moderate VSDs that persist into adulthood require assessment and likely closure to prevent long-term complications.

Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA)

The ductus arteriosus is a vessel connecting the aorta to the pulmonary artery that is normal in fetal circulation but should close within days of birth. Persistent PDA allows blood to flow from the aorta into the pulmonary artery, increasing pulmonary blood flow. Small PDAs may be asymptomatic but are at risk of infective endocarditis. Significant PDAs require closure.

Bicuspid Aortic Valve

The aortic valve has two leaflets instead of the normal three. Affects 1 to 2% of the population. Associated with accelerated valve degeneration causing aortic stenosis or regurgitation, and aortic root dilation requiring surveillance. The most common congenital heart anomaly in adults.

Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF)

A combination of four defects: VSD, overriding aorta, pulmonary stenosis, and right ventricular hypertrophy. The most common cyanotic congenital heart defect. Virtually all surviving adults have had surgical repair in childhood and require lifelong cardiology follow-up for residual problems including pulmonary regurgitation, right ventricular dysfunction, and ventricular arrhythmias.

Coarctation of the Aorta

A narrowing of the aorta, usually just beyond the origin of the left subclavian artery. Causes hypertension in the upper body and reduced flow to the lower body. Associated with bicuspid aortic valve. Treated with surgical or balloon-based repair, but blood pressure often remains elevated even after successful treatment.

Pulmonary Stenosis

Narrowing of the pulmonary valve or the area just below or above it, obstructing blood flow from the right ventricle to the lungs. Mild pulmonary stenosis is well tolerated lifelong. Severe stenosis is treated with balloon valvuloplasty or surgery.

Transposition of the Great Arteries (TGA)

The aorta arises from the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery from the left ventricle, reversing normal circulation. Incompatible with life without early surgery. All surviving adults have had complex surgical repair in infancy and require lifelong specialist follow-up.

Symptoms of Congenital Heart Disease in Adults

Adults presenting with previously undiagnosed CHD, or with a known defect that has changed, may experience any of the following:

Breathlessness:

Particularly with exertion, from reduced cardiac output, pulmonary hypertension, or arrhythmia.

Fatigue and reduced exercise tolerance:

Disproportionate tiredness with activity, often attributed incorrectly to deconditioning or other causes.

Palpitations:

Arrhythmias, including atrial flutter, atrial fibrillation, and ventricular tachycardia, are common complications in adult CHD.

Cyanosis:

Bluish discoloration of the lips, fingertips, or toes, indicating reduced oxygen saturation from a right-to-left shunt. More common in complex, unrepaired, or residual defects.

Heart murmur:

Detected on examination, often the first sign of an undiagnosed defect in an asymptomatic adult.

Leg swelling:

From right heart failure, more common in patients with pulmonary hypertension or significant shunt lesions.

Stroke or TIA:

Paradoxical embolism through an ASD or patent foramen ovale (PFO) can cause stroke in young adults without other obvious stroke risk factors.

Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease

2D Echocardiography:

Echo with Doppler and color flow mapping is the primary investigation. It identifies structural defects, measures shunt size, assesses chamber function and pressures, and guides intervention planning.

Transoesophageal Echocardiography (TOE):

Provides superior visualization of the atrial septum for ASD and PFO assessment, and guides device closure procedures.

Cardiac MRI:

The gold standard for quantifying shunt size, right ventricular function, and great vessel anatomy. Essential in complex CHD and for follow-up of repaired defects.

CT Angiography:

Provides detailed 3D anatomy of the heart and great vessels. Valuable for surgical planning in complex lesions and for assessing aortic anatomy in bicuspid aortic valve and coarctation.

Cardiac Catheterization:

Measures pressures in all heart chambers and calculates shunt ratios accurately. Essential when pulmonary hypertension is suspected, as pulmonary vascular resistance determines whether a defect is safely closeable.

Genetic Testing:

Relevant when CHD is associated with chromosomal or gene-based syndromes, including Down syndrome (ASD, VSD, AVSD), Turner syndrome (coarctation, bicuspid aortic valve), and 22q11 deletion syndrome (conotruncal defects).

Treatment of Congenital Heart Defects at Germanten

Catheter-Based Defect Closure

Most ASDs and many VSDs and PDAs can now be closed through a catheter-based approach without open-heart surgery. A closure device (most commonly an Amplatzer or equivalent device) is delivered through a catheter via the femoral vein, positioned across the defect under echocardiographic and fluoroscopic guidance, and deployed to occlude the hole. Learn more about our ASD and VSD closure programme.

Surgical Repair

Defects not suitable for catheter-based closure, or those requiring combined procedures (valve repair plus defect closure), are treated surgically. Open repair under cardiopulmonary bypass allows direct visualization and precise correction of complex anatomy. Surgical repair of simple defects such as ASD and VSD carries very low operative mortality at experienced centers.

Arrhythmia Management

Adults with CHD have a significantly higher lifetime risk of arrhythmias than the general population. Atrial flutter and fibrillation are particularly common after atrial-level surgical repairs. Radiofrequency ablation, antiarrhythmic medications, and in selected patients pacemaker or ICD implantation, are used based on the arrhythmia type and underlying anatomy.

Pulmonary Hypertension Management

When a large shunt has been present for years without closure, the pulmonary blood vessels can develop fixed high-pressure disease (Eisenmenger syndrome), at which point defect closure is no longer safe or beneficial. These patients are managed with targeted pulmonary arterial hypertension therapies. The window for safe defect closure emphasizes the importance of early detection and timely intervention.

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Cardiology Hospital Near You in Attapur, Hyderabad

Germanten Hospital is located in Attapur, one of South Hyderabad's most accessible neighborhoods. Patients from across southern and western Hyderabad can reach us within 20 to 30 minutes.

Full address: Germanten Hospital, Attapur, Hyderabad, Telangana 500048. View on Google Maps
Reaching Germanten Hospital from Major Localities:
  • - Mehdipatnam (approx. 8 minutes)
  • - Rajendra Nagar (approx. 10 minutes)
  • - Tolichowki (approx. 7 minutes)
  • - Banjara Hills (approx. 15 minutes)
  • - Jubilee Hills (approx. 18 minutes)
  • - Kondapur & Gachibowli (approx. 25 minutes via PVNR Expressway)
  • - Shamshabad & Airport Road (approx. 30 minutes)
GET ANSWERS

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, particularly for smaller defects and those that are well tolerated. Small ASDs, mild pulmonary stenosis, and bicuspid aortic valve are frequently asymptomatic into adulthood and discovered incidentally on a routine check-up, murmur evaluation, or imaging done for another reason. Even larger defects such as secundum ASD can be surprisingly well-tolerated into the third or fourth decade of life before causing symptoms of breathlessness or arrhythmia.
Catheter-based ASD closure is a minimally invasive procedure performed under sedation or light general anesthesia through a small puncture in the groin vein. Most patients are discharged within 24 hours and return to normal activity within a week. Surgical ASD closure involves open-heart surgery with a short sternotomy and cardiopulmonary bypass, with a hospital stay of 5 to 7 days and recovery of 4 to 6 weeks. Suitability for catheter-based closure depends on defect size, location, and the adequacy of surrounding tissue (rim) to anchor the device.
In most cases, yes. Even after successful repair, residual abnormalities, arrhythmias, and new complications can develop decades later. Patients with complex repaired CHD should be seen at least annually by a cardiologist familiar with adult congenital heart disease. Patients with simple, fully repaired defects and no residual abnormalities may be seen less frequently, but regular assessment remains advisable throughout life.
Many women with CHD have uncomplicated pregnancies and deliveries. However, pregnancy imposes significant haemodynamic stress on the cardiovascular system, and for some forms of CHD, particularly those associated with pulmonary hypertension, severe ventricular dysfunction, or cyanosis, pregnancy carries substantial maternal and fetal risk. Pre-conception counseling with a cardiologist is strongly recommended for all women with significant CHD to assess individual risk, optimize cardiac status before conception, and plan obstetric care.