Truncus arteriosus is a heart defect in which a single artery instead of two (truncus arteriosus) carries blood from the heart. It’s a congenital condition, meaning a baby is born with it. A baby with truncus arteriosus also is born without a pulmonary valve.
In a normal heart, the aorta carries blood out of the left heart ventricle, and the pulmonary artery carries blood out of the right ventricle. With truncus arteriosus, there is only one blood vessel to pump blood to both the body and the lungs. Having just a single vessel means that oxygen-rich (red) blood and oxygen-poor (blue) blood is mixed and flows through the lungs and body. Over time, this can cause damage to the heart and lungs.
Children with truncus arteriosus also have a ventricular septal defect (VSD), a hole in the wall that normally separates the left and right ventricles.
Truncus arteriosus is rare. Fewer than one out of every 10,000 babies is born with this condition. Babies born with truncus arteriosus need surgery to repair the defect.