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If your baby has a fetal heart condition you will be seen by Packard Children’s Hospital’s fetal cardiologists, pediatric heart surgeons, high-risk obstetricians, and neonatologists.
Many can be seen with a fetal echocardiogram (echo), which is a detailed ultrasound exam that takes images of the heart.
Many infants with a heart condition do not need immediate emergency care. Some may need medicine shortly after birth, and may need close monitoring and care in a NICU.
Rarely, fetuses with severe heart defects are expected to have life-threatening cardiovascular or respiratory problems immediately upon being disconnected from the placenta. For these cases, we ensure that there is immediate access to cardiac therapies (IMPACT) after the delivery. Learn more about how we care for infants with cardiac conditions in our Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit.
In most cases, the type of delivery is not chosen because of a heart condition. Generally, if a vaginal delivery is safe for the mother, it is also safe for the baby. In the very rare cases when we need to deliver immediate surgical or other cardiac intervention, a cesarean delivery is done in a cardiac operating room, and the baby is then immediately transferred to an adjacent room for heart surgery or cardiac catheterization. Your baby will receive care at our Level IV NICU or Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit.
How a heart condition affects a baby varies widely and depends on how severe the problem is, when it is diagnosed, and how it is treated. The likelihood of a child having a developmental disability or delay when he or she is older increases with how complex the heart defect is.
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