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What is a congenital heart defect?
Common examples include holes in the inside walls of the heart and narrowed or leaky valves. In more severe forms of CHDs, blood vessels or heart chambers may be missing, poorly formed, and/or in the wrong place.
How common are congenital heart defects?
An approximate 100-200 deaths are due to unrecognized heart disease in newborns each year. These numbers exclude those dying before diagnosis. Nearly 40,000 infants in the U.S. are born each year with CHDs. CHDs are as common as autism and about twenty-five times more common than cystic fibrosis. Approximately two to three million individuals are thought to be living in the United States with CHDs. Because there is no U.S. system to track CHDs beyond early childhood, more precise estimates are not available.
Thanks to improvements in survival, the number of adults living with CHDs is increasing. It is now believed that the number of adults living with CHDs is at least equal to, if not greater than, the number of children living with CHDs.
What is the health impact of congenital heart defects?
Surgery is often not a cure for CHDs. Many individuals with CHDs require additional operation(s) and/or medications as adults. People with CHDs face a life-long risk of health problems such as issues with growth and eating, developmental delays, difficulty with exercise, heart rhythm problems, heart failure, sudden cardiac arrest or stroke.
People with CHDs are now living long enough to develop illnesses like the rest of the adult population, such as high blood pressure, obesity and acquired heart disease. CHDs are now the most common heart problem in pregnant women.
What causes congenital heart defects?
Environmental exposures that may be related to risk of having a CHD include the mother’s diet and certain chemicals and medications. Maternal diabetes is a recognized cause of CHDs. Maternal obesity, smoking, and some infections also may raise the risk of having a baby with a CHD. Preventing these risk factors before a pregnancy is crucial. A baby’s risk of having a CHD is increased by 3 times if the mother, father, or sibling has a CHD.
What are the health care access and cost challenges related to congenital heart defects?
Compared to the general population, adults with CHD have 3 – 4 times higher rates of Emergency Room visits, hospitalizations, and Intensive Care Unit stays. Fewer than 10% of adults with CHDs in the U.S. who need care from specialty adult CHD centers are receiving this recommended care.
The above information is taken directly from the Congenital Heart Public Health Consortium of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Click here to learn more about the currently known public health impact of congenital heart disease.
Additional Resources for Parents
Little Mended Heart Guide for Parents – Valuable tool for parents who have a child diagnosed with congenital heart disease.
Pediatric Congenital Heart Association Guided Questions – Valuable questionnaire for parents to ask of medical providers taking part in care of their child with a congenital heart defect.
HeartPedia Mobile App – Free mobile application to visually understand individual heart defects and unique issues related to each defect.
