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Apex Nursing

Chart — Pediatrics

Cyanotic vs Acyanotic Heart Defects Chart

Every congenital heart defect sorts into two columns by what its abnormal blood flow does. Left-to-right floods the lungs and looks like heart failure; right-to-left skips the lungs and looks blue. Learn the split and the defect names fall into place.

Educational use only. Defect-specific management, prostaglandin use, and oxygen targets are individualized — follow cardiology orders and your facility’s pediatric protocols. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

FeatureAcyanotic (L→R / obstructive)Cyanotic (R→L / mixing)
Shunt / flowLeft-to-right (oxygenated blood recirculates to lungs); or obstruction to outflowRight-to-left or mixing (deoxygenated blood reaches the body)
ColorPink — but lungs and right heart overloadedBlue (cyanosis), worse with crying/exertion
Classic pictureHeart failure: poor feeding, diaphoresis with feeds, tachypnea, failure to thriveHypoxemia: cyanosis, clubbing, polycythemia, tet spells, squatting
Defects in this groupVSD (most common), ASD, PDA, AV canal; obstructive: coarctation, aortic/pulmonic stenosisThe 5 Ts — Tetralogy of Fallot, Transposition, Tricuspid atresia, Truncus arteriosus, TAPVR
Signature findingPDA — continuous machine-like murmur; coarctation — strong arm pulses/BP, weak femoral pulsesTOF — tet spells relieved by knee-chest/squatting; transposition — needs mixing (PGE1) to survive
Key managementTreat heart failure (digoxin, diuretics), high-calorie feeding; close PDA with indomethacin; surgical/catheter repairKeep ductus OPEN with PGE1 in ductal-dependent lesions; knee-chest for tet spells; surgical correction
Oxygen cautionGenerally toleratedIn ductal-dependent lesions O₂ can constrict the ductus and worsen flow — use ordered targets

Exam Traps

  • Sort the defect by shunt FIRST — acyanotic = heart-failure picture, cyanotic = blue. The rest follows.
  • Cyanotic defects = the 5 Ts: Tetralogy, Transposition, Tricuspid atresia, Truncus arteriosus, TAPVR.
  • PGE1 keeps the ductus OPEN (ductal-dependent cyanotic lesions); indomethacin CLOSES a PDA. Opposite jobs, same vessel.
  • Tet spell → knee-chest position first; the squatting toddler is self-treating.
  • Coarctation: high BP and bounding pulses in the arms, weak femoral pulses and cool legs — compare upper and lower.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) · CDC / ACIP (immunization schedule). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →