clinical features of ventricular septal defect
Last reviewed 12/2022
The patient may be asymptomatic with a small shunt. Large shunts may cause:
- dyspnoea
- recurrent chest infections
- in infancy, failure to thrive, depending on the size of the defect.
On examination there may be:
- bulging sternum - enlarged right ventricle
- cyanosis - if pulmonary vascular resistance is intermittently reversing the direction of the shunt.
- pulse and jugular venous pressure are normal.
- praecordial impulse - if there is a significant shunt then there may be a left parasternal heave and a forceful apical impulse - biventricular hypertrophy.
- rarely there may be a groove in the ribs corresponding to the insertion of the diaphragm, if the lungs have been chronically stiff because of pulmonary plethora.
Auscultation:
- Heart sounds - the loudness of P2 is an indicator of pulmonary vascular resistance. If there is an increase in pulmonary resistance then the pulmonary diastolic pressure increases and P2 becomes louder.
- Murmur of the defect:
- a very small defect may close in late systole so that the murmur is only heard during early systole.
- pansystolic murmur and thrill, maximal at the lower left sternal edge in a moderate or large defect
- if a large defect is not surgically rectified then there is a gradual increase in pulmonary vascular resistance and the murmur diminishes.
- flow murmurs mid-diastolic, through the mitral valve, but usually hidden by the pansystolic murmur
- aortic incompetence may develop in a small percentage of sub-arterial VSDs.
cyanosis (central, in children)