What Is Congenitally Corrected Transposition?
- 7 May 1970
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 282 (19) , 1097-1098
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197005072821912
Abstract
For the physician who is not a pediatric cardiologist, ordinary transposition of the great arteries may seem mysterious enough, but "congenitally corrected transposition" is a "triple whammy" that perhaps means virtually nothing to anybody — except congenital heart buffs. So what is it? Briefly, congenitally corrected transposition refers to malformations of the ventricles and great arteries characterized by ventricular discordance with transposition of the great arteries. Ventricular discordance indicates that the ventricles do not correspond to the atria. In corrected transposition with situs solitus (normal locations) of the viscera and atria, the ventricles are inverted; with situs inversus of the . . .Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Morphogenesis of Corrected Transposition and Other Anomalies of Cardiac PolarityCirculation, 1964
- Pathogenesis of transposition complexesThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1963