Congenital Heart Conditions
Overview
Congenital heart conditions are heart abnormalities that develop before birth and affect how the heart forms or functions. Some conditions are mild and only require monitoring, while others may affect blood flow, breathing, feeding, growth, or activity levels and require medical or surgical treatment.
Some congenital heart conditions are identified during pregnancy or shortly after birth, while others become noticeable later during infancy or childhood because of symptoms such as poor feeding, fatigue, breathing difficulty, or delayed growth.
The focus is on early diagnosis, careful monitoring, coordinated heart care, and long-term support that helps children continue developing safely and actively.
Symptoms
Symptoms vary depending on the type and severity of the heart condition. Symptoms and concerns may include:
- Heart murmurs
- Breathing difficulties
- Poor feeding
- Poor weight gain or growth
- Easy tiredness during activity
- Sweating during feeding or activity
- Blue lips or skin colour changes
- Frequent respiratory infections
Some children may have mild symptoms, while others may require urgent assessment and ongoing cardiac monitoring.
Causes & Risk Factors
Congenital heart conditions develop before birth as the heart forms during pregnancy. Risk factors may include:
- Family history of congenital heart disease
- Genetic or developmental conditions
- Maternal illness during pregnancy
- Certain infections during pregnancy
- Pregnancy-related complications
In many cases, the exact cause may not be clearly identified.
When to Seek Care
You should seek medical assessment if your child:
- Has a heart murmur
- Experiences breathing or feeding difficulties
- Has poor growth or weight gain
- Becomes unusually tired during activity
- Develops blue lips or colour changes
- Requires ongoing heart monitoring
Emergency Symptoms
Some congenital heart conditions may become serious and require urgent medical care. Seek immediate medical care if your child experiences:
- Severe breathing difficulty
- Blue lips or severe colour changes
- Difficulty feeding with worsening weakness
- Collapse or reduced responsiveness
- Severe tiredness or poor circulation
Prevention
Not all congenital heart conditions can be prevented, but early pregnancy care and monitoring may help support healthier pregnancy outcomes. Helpful measures may include:
- Routine antenatal care
- Managing maternal medical conditions
- Early pregnancy monitoring
- Prompt treatment of infections during pregnancy
Diagnostics Used
Heart investigations may be used to assess heart structure, blood flow, rhythm, and overall heart function. Depending on your child’s needs, the care team may use:
- Echocardiography
- Chest X-Ray (Bedside)
- Cardiac MRI With Contrast
- CBC
- RFTs for imaging
- Serum Electrolytes
-
Pro-BNP
- Heart rhythm monitoring
- Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Holter Monitoring
- Haemodynamic Monitoring
Support Services
Children with congenital heart conditions may benefit from additional nutritional, developmental, rehabilitation, or emotional wellbeing support. Support services may include:
- Nutrition support
- Physiotherapy and rehabilitation support
- Counselling and emotional wellbeing support
- Family education and guidance
- Referral coordination and long-term follow-up support
This multidisciplinary approach helps support growth, recovery, activity, development, and long-term wellbeing.