Case Study Of Eisenmenger Syndrome

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First and foremost, Eisenmenger syndrome was initially described in 1897 when German physician, Victor Eisenmenger, reported on a patient with symptoms of dyspnea and cyanosis from infancy that subsequently developed heart failure (Connolly, 2014). The postmortem description was revealed and a ventricular septal defect was discovered (El-Chami et al., 2014a). With that being said, this had been the first time that the link between a large congenital cardiac shunt defect and the development of pulmonary hypertension had ever been noted (El-Chami et al., 2014b). The normal heart has four chambers. The two upper chambers are separated from each other by the atrial septum (NORD, 2014a). The two lower chambers are known as ventricles and are separated from each other by the ventricular septum (NORD, 2014b). Eisenmenger Syndrome is a congenital heart defect that is …show more content…

My main image is a display of a red blood cell because that’s what Eisenmenger Syndrome is in a nut shell, a congenital heart defect (hole in the heart) that is made up of actual red blood cells. I felt that this image was very fitting for my topic because that is essentially what my research was about. I choose the image tiles that I did because Eisenmenger’s Syndrome occurs in babies and is discovered during birth. Also, I like to further my research on topics such as this one because I hope to have kids one day, so the more knowledge I have on the different types of congenital diseases the healthier my future children might be. Through these specific tiles, I’m trying to convey the fact that Eisenmenger’s Syndrome is an extremely rare disease that occurs in babies because it is a congenital defect and I wanted to learn more about the disease as well as placing awareness on

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