can ventricular septal defect be diagnosed reliably without an echocardiogram?
OBJECTIVES: This study was undertaken to determine the accuracy of expert examination for ventricular septal defect (VSD) among children with a heart murmur. BACKGROUND: Because the frequency and nature of errors that might be made by reliance solely on expert examination for diagnosis of VSD are speculative, the role of echocardiography in such diagnosis is controversial. METHODS: Two hundred eighty-seven consecutive previously unevaluated pediatric subjects were enrolled in the study. For each child, the pediatric cardiologists prospectively recorded a working diagnosis and their level of confidence in the diagnosis, categorizing any VSD diagnosed as small or moderate to large. After echocardiography, VSDs were subcategorized by location and requirement for treatment as minor, intermediate or major. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves described the accuracy of the clinical examination. RESULTS: Seventy-three subjects had a VSD (minor in 52, intermediate in 10 and major in