Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) and Double Outlet Right Ventricle (DORV) can look very similar on fetal ultrasound.
Both involve:
- VSD
- Aortic override
- Abnormal outflow tract alignment
So how do we differentiate them?
1οΈβ£ The Key Question
π Where does the aorta arise from?
That is the core difference.
TOF (Tetralogy of Fallot)
β Aorta overrides the VSD
β But still primarily connected to the left ventricle
β Pulmonary stenosis present
On 4-chamber view:
- VSD visible
- Overriding aorta partially over septum
On outflow tract view:
- Pulmonary artery smaller than aorta
π Aorta originates mainly from LV (with override)
DORV (Double Outlet Right Ventricle)
β Both aorta and pulmonary artery arise predominantly from the right ventricle
β Large VSD is required for LV output
Key point:
π Aorta arises entirely or mostly from RV
On imaging:
- Both great vessels aligned over RV
- VSD provides LV connection
2οΈβ£ Why They Look Similar
Because both show:
- Overriding aorta
- VSD
- Abnormal outflow relationship
But the degree of override matters.
TOF β partial override
DORV β near complete RV origin
3οΈβ£ Practical Ultrasound Clues
β Assess the relationship of great arteries to ventricles
β Trace the outflow tracts carefully
β Look at subaortic conus presence
β Evaluate pulmonary stenosis severity
If pulmonary stenosis is severe and aorta is mildly overriding β think TOF.
If both great arteries sit mostly over RV β think DORV.
4οΈβ£ Why It Matters
Because prognosis and surgical planning differ.
TOF:
- Well-defined surgical repair
- Often isolated
DORV:
- Multiple anatomical subtypes
- Surgical strategy depends on VSD location
Clinical Tip
When unsure:
π Ask: Does the LV have a direct connection to the aorta?
If yes β more likely TOF
If no β think DORV