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Management of Adults With Congenital Heart Disease

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6 Definitions and Classifications Table 5. Physiological Variables as Used in ACHD AP Classification Variable Description Arrhythmia Arrhythmias are very common in patients with ACHD and may be both the cause and the consequence of deteriorating hemodynamics, valvular dysfunction, or ventricular dysfunction. Given that arrhythmias are associated with symptoms, outcomes, and prognosis, they are categorized based on their presence and their response to treatment. • No sustained arrhythmia: No documented clinically relevant atrial or ventricular tachyarrhythmias • Arrhythmia not requiring new treatment or a change in therapy in the past 12 months: Bradyarrhythmia, atrial or ventricular tachyarrhythmia not requiring new antiarrhythmic therapy, cardioversion, ablation, or pacemaker/ICD placement • Recurrent arrhythmias that are hemodynamically significant and/or refractory to treatment Concomitant valvular heart disease (VHD) Severity defined according to the 2020 VHD guideline. • Mild VHD • Moderate VHD • Severe VHD Exercise capacity Patients with ACHD are oen asymptomatic despite exercise limitations that manifest as diminished exercise capacity upon objective evaluation; accordingly, assessing both subjective and objective exercise capacity is important (see NYHA classification system below). Exercise capacity is associated with prognosis. • Abnormal objective cardiac limitation to exercise is defined as an exercise maximum ventilatory equivalent of oxygen below the range expected for the specific congenital heart disease anatomic diagnosis. Hypoxemia/ hypoxia/cyanosis See Section 3.5 for a detailed definition of cyanosis. • Hypoxemia is defined as baseline oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry at rest ≤92%. • Severe hypoxemia is defined as oxygen saturation at rest ≤85%. • Hypoxia refers to inadequate tissue oxygenation that may or may not be present in the setting of chronic hypoxemia. • Cyanosis is blue or purple discoloration of the skin, lips, and nailbeds caused by levels ≥5 g/dL of desaturated hemoglobin; it is visible in patients with chronic hypoxemia and normal or high hemoglobin levels but may be absent in patients with anemia.

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