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Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome and a Trip Across State Lines
Podcast |
DDx
Publisher |
Figure 1
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Health
Science & Medicine
Categories Via RSS |
Education
Health & Fitness
Medicine
Publication Date |
Feb 01, 2023
Episode Duration |
00:10:13

Following a normal first trimester, a pregnant patient starts spotting. The patient’s care provider books an urgent ultrasound to see what is causing the bleeding. The main concerns are if the spotting is caused by a miscarriage or something else.

Following the ultrasound, the technician calls in obstetrician Dr. Ashley Brant to review the results with the patient. There is a problem with the fetus’ heart — specifically, a condition called hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Essentially, the left side of the heart doesn’t develop normally and can’t pump blood in the way that it should.

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome causes poor oxygenation, meaning the skin can be bluish or with dark discolorations. It also causes difficulty breathing, feeding, and lethargy. Treatment includes multiple surgeries after birth, and can even require a heart transplant. 

Without treatment, the condition is fatal.

The patient is offered genetic testing to determine if the heart condition is a symptom of a larger genetic disease. Regardless, the prognosis is grim.

The patient meets with Dr. Brant to discuss all of the options, including continuing or ending the pregnancy. 

“I think everybody who's in a situation where they're thinking about ending a pregnancy because of a major fetal anomaly, they are thinking about what is the kindest decision, the most loving decision that they can make for their baby,” shared Dr. Brant. “Nobody wants to be in this position. And they're thinking about what the experience is going to be like for this child.”

The patient makes the decision to end the pregnancy through the dilation and evacuation method. 

However, the procedure cannot be performed in the state because of a heartbeat law in place at the time. 

And so Dr. Brant refers the patient to an out-of-state clinic where the initial procedure to stop the heartbeat can be performed. But, in order to be where the patient has the support of the medical team she knows and who has been by her side, the patient returns to her home state for the final procedure. 

“No one ever envisions themselves needing an abortion. No one ever thinks, ‘I want to have an abortion,’ before they're in a position of needing one. I would just encourage compassion and empathy and trying to understand the life that someone else might be walking in.”

When an ultrasound discovers something unexpected — hypoplastic left heart syndrome, a major fetal cardiac anomaly — a patient is put on a cross-state journey that she never planned for.

Following a normal first trimester, a pregnant patient starts spotting. The patient’s care provider books an urgent ultrasound to see what is causing the bleeding. The main concerns are if the spotting is caused by a miscarriage or something else.

Following the ultrasound, the technician calls in obstetrician Dr. Ashley Brant to review the results with the patient. There is a problem with the fetus’ heart — specifically, a condition called hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Essentially, the left side of the heart doesn’t develop normally and can’t pump blood in the way that it should.

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome causes poor oxygenation, meaning the skin can be bluish or with dark discolorations. It also causes difficulty breathing, feeding, and lethargy. Treatment includes multiple surgeries after birth, and can even require a heart transplant. 

Without treatment, the condition is fatal.

The patient is offered genetic testing to determine if the heart condition is a symptom of a larger genetic disease. Regardless, the prognosis is grim.

The patient meets with Dr. Brant to discuss all of the options, including continuing or ending the pregnancy. 

“I think everybody who's in a situation where they're thinking about ending a pregnancy because of a major fetal anomaly, they are thinking about what is the kindest decision, the most loving decision that they can make for their baby,” shared Dr. Brant. “Nobody wants to be in this position. And they're thinking about what the experience is going to be like for this child.”

The patient makes the decision to end the pregnancy through the dilation and evacuation method. 

However, the procedure cannot be performed in the state because of a heartbeat law in place at the time. 

And so Dr. Brant refers the patient to an out-of-state clinic where the initial procedure to stop the heartbeat can be performed. But, in order to be where the patient has the support of the medical team she knows and who has been by her side, the patient returns to her home state for the final procedure. 

“No one ever envisions themselves needing an abortion. No one ever thinks, ‘I want to have an abortion,’ before they're in a position of needing one. I would just encourage compassion and empathy and trying to understand the life that someone else might be walking in.”

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