Diseases and Conditions

Pulmonary atresia with ventricular septum defect

Overview Diagnosis Treatment

Overview

Pulmonary atresia (uh-TREE-zhuh) is one of several heart valve defects that may be found at birth or soon after. In pulmonary atresia, the valve between the heart and lungs (pulmonary valve) is not fully developed, which prevents forward blood flow to the lungs, and your baby doesn't get needed oxygen.

Normally, some blood enters the lungs through other passages within the heart and its arteries. Before your baby is born, it receives blood through a hole between the top chambers of your baby's heart (foramen ovale), and blood is pumped out to the rest of your baby's body.

After birth, the foramen ovale usually closes, but in pulmonary atresia it may stay open. Another temporary opening (ductus arteriosus) may allow some blood flow, but your baby will need medication, procedures or surgery to correct the atresia.

In this heart defect, there is also a hole between the two pumping chambers (ventricular septal defect, or VSD) of your baby's heart.

The pulmonary artery and its branches can be very small or nonexistent. In the latter case, additional arteries arise from the aorta to provide blood flow to the lung (major aortopulmonary collateral arteries, or MAPCAs).