1. Truncus arteriosus: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia
in which a single blood vessel (truncus arteriosus) comes out of the right and left ventricles, instead of the normal two (pulmonary artery and aorta).
MedlinePlus (Offsite)
2. Truncus Arteriosus
DISCLAIMER: NOAH is an information guide only and cannot answer personal health-related or research questions. NOAH's information has been selected from a variety of consumer health resources; it is offered to you with the understanding that it no...
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3. Truncus Arteriosus
Truncus arteriosus is a congenital (present at birth) defect that occurs due to abnormal development of the fetal heart during the first 8 weeks of pregnancy. The heart begins as a hollow tube, and the chambers, valves, and great arteries develop ...
www.muschealth.com
4. Truncus Arteriosus
In a normal heart, the blood follow this cycle: body-heart-lungs-heart-body. When a person has a truncus arteriosus, the blood leaving the heart does not follow this path. It has only one vessel, instead of two separate ones for the lungs and body...
www.heart.org
5. Truncus arteriosus
Truncus arteriosus is a rare type of congenital heart disease characterized by a single blood vessel arising from the right and left ventricles, instead of the normal two (pulmonary artery and aorta).
www.uhseast.com
6. Truncus arteriosus
Truncus arteriosus is a rare type of congenital heart disease in which a single blood vessel (truncus arteriosus) comes out of the right and left ventricles, instead of the normal two (pulmonary artery and aorta).
www.clarian.org
7. Truncus Arteriosus
This type of congenital defect occurs when a single great artery, either pulmonary artery or aorta leaves the base of the heart and gives rise to coronary, pulmonary, and systemic arteries. Only one semilunar valve is present in this condition. Th...
perfline.com
8. Truncus Arteriosus: eMedicine Radiology
Truncus arteriosus is a congenital heart disease characterized by a single great artery that leaves the base of the heart, giving rise to the coronary, pulmonary, and systemic arteries. Wilson described the first case in 1798.
emedicine.medscape.com
9. OhioHealth - Truncus arteriosus
Truncus arteriosus (TRUNG-kus ahr-teer-e-O-sus), or persistent truncus arteriosus, is a rare heart defect that's present at birth (congenital). If your baby has truncus arteriosus, one large...
ohiohealth.com
10. Truncus Arteriosus Text
Classified according to origin of PA (Collett and Edwards) or development of aorticopulmonary septum and presence or absence of interrupted aortic arch (van Praagh)
www.ctsnet.org