Atrioventricular septal defects are heart defects present at birth.

The heart is divided into four chambers that help circulate blood through the body. The top two chambers are called atria and the bottom two are ventricles. Two valves exist between the upper and lower chambers; the tricuspid valve on the right side of the heart, and the mitral valve on the left side. Tissue, called the septum, divides the chambers and grows as the fetus develops in the womb.

An atrioventricular septal defect is the failure of any of the tissues that help divide the chambers to grow completely, leaving one or more “holes,” and possibly one leaky valve instead of two separate valves. It is possible for this defect to show up as only one small hole, or as multiple holes, and tissue development problems.

Depending on the severity of the defect, the heart may have to work much harder to circulate blood correctly through the body. Open-heart surgery is often required to correct the defect in babies before there is damage to the pulmonary circulation.

The simplest form of the defect is atrial septal defect, which is a hole between the top two chambers (atria) of the heart that causes blood to flow from left to right instead of correctly through the heart.

During development in the womb, the septal tissue fails to grow correctly, resulting in an atrioventricular septal defect.

Ventricular Septal Defect
Ventral septal defect
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