Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/43696
Título: Cor triatriatum dexter versus prominent eustachian valve in an adult congenital heart disease patient
Autores/as: Martínez Quintana, Efrén 
Rodríguez-González, Fayna
Marrero-Santiago, Hector
Santana-Montesdeoca, Jose
López-Gude, María Jesús
Clasificación UNESCO: 320501 Cardiología
Palabras clave: Cor triatriatum Dexter
Eustachian Valve
Congenital
Echocardiography
Computed Tomography
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Editor/a: 1747-079X
Publicación seriada: Congenital Heart Disease 
Resumen: An eustachian valve (EV) remnant, if present, is usually noted by the presence of a thin ridge or a crescent-shapedfold of endocardium arising from the anterior rim of the inferior vena cava orifice due to the persistence of the rightsinus venosus valve. Though the embryologic explanation of cor triatriatum dexter (CTD) is the same as that of thenormal formation of the EV—lack of regression of the right sinus venosus valve—it is usually called CTD or dividedright atrium when there are attachments on the atrial septum giving the appearance of a divided atrium. However,it’s called prominent eustachian valve when the right sinus venosus valve has partly regressed, with no remainingseptal attachments and without the appearance of a divided atrium. We present the case of an adult patient with anatrial septal defect with a high insertion of a giant EV, which mimics the echocardiographic appearance of dividedright atrium.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/43696
ISSN: 1747-079X
DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-0803.2012.00648.x
Fuente: Congenital Heart Disease [ISSN 1747-079X], v. 8, p. 589-591
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