RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Cardiac murmurs may be frequently found in otherwise asymptomatic children. Obstetric ultrasound screening for congenital heart disease is increasingly used to provide an antenatal diagnosis and an early treatment; thus, the incidence of cardiac anomalies in children has changed. We evaluated cardiac murmurs in otherwise healthy children referred to a level I pediatric cardiology institution. METHODS: Echocardiography data from a cohort of 2045 patients from 2000 to 2009 were evaluated and the incidence and type of a newly diagnosed congenital heart disease have been determined. RESULTS: The majority of the children with a cardiac murmur were found to have an innocent murmur, chordae tendinae, or a minor lesion. Children born after obstetric screening are nevertheless associated with a small risk of severe congenital heart disease. We found 14.9% with a previously unknown congenital cardiac malformation; 1.4% required medical treatment and 0.6% of the patients had either a catheter or a surgical intervention. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides evidence that the use of obstetric screening for congenital heart disease reduces the occurrence of severe heart disease. Otherwise healthy children with murmurs still bear a small risk of having a cardiac defect, even if a prenatal study was negative. Therefore, the evaluation of children with a murmur by a pediatric cardiologist is recommended in an antenatally-screened population.