Complex Congenital Heart Disease
Cross-source consensus on Complex Congenital Heart Disease from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Risks & contraindications
Background
Other
Highlighted claims
- Children with complex congenital heart disease are at elevated risk for executive function difficulties. — Multimodal personalised executive function intervention (E-Fit) for school-aged children with complex congenital heart disease in Switzerland: a randomised controlled feasibility study
- Congenital heart disease is the most common birth defect and has an estimated prevalence of about 1%. — Multimodal personalised executive function intervention (E-Fit) for school-aged children with complex congenital heart disease in Switzerland: a randomised controlled feasibility study
- About one-third of newborns with congenital heart disease have complex disease requiring cardiopulmonary bypass surgery within the first year of life. — Multimodal personalised executive function intervention (E-Fit) for school-aged children with complex congenital heart disease in Switzerland: a randomised controlled feasibility study
- Survival improvements have shifted clinical focus toward long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes in complex congenital heart disease. — Multimodal personalised executive function intervention (E-Fit) for school-aged children with complex congenital heart disease in Switzerland: a randomised controlled feasibility study
- Lower socioeconomic status is described as a risk factor for reduced executive functions in children with complex congenital heart disease. — Multimodal personalised executive function intervention (E-Fit) for school-aged children with complex congenital heart disease in Switzerland: a randomised controlled feasibility study