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A case with double-chambered right ventricle and left ventricular-right atrial communication (Gerbode defect): potential pitfall for Eisenmenger syndrome.

The ventricular septal defect (VSD) can rarely be associated with other malformations such as double-chambered right ventricle (DCRV) in which hypertrophied muscle bundles divide the right ventricle into two chambers causing progressive obstruction (Mao et al., Asia Pac J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 5:14-17, 1996). Most VSDs close spontaneously by apposition of the tricuspid leaflets, but the process is rarely disrupted, resulting in communication between left ventricle and right atrium called Gerbode defect [Cho et al., J Cardiovasc Ultrasound 19(3):148-151, 2011]. Hence, the Gerbode defect involves potential misinterpretation of its high-velocity shunt as pulmonary hypertension. Here we present a case with DCRV and Gerbode defect initially misdiagnosed to have Eisenmenger syndrome.

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