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(Chest. 1966;50:1-12.)
© 1966 American College of Chest Physicians

Taussig-Bing Complex with Pulmonary Stenosis

Francisco Navarro Lopez M.D.1; Glen G. Dobben M.D.2; Murray Robinowitz M.D.3; Lloyd A. Ferguson M.D.1; Hyman Reisler M.D.1; Donald E. Cassels M.D., F.C.C.P.4; and Maurice Lev M.D., F.C.C.P.5

1 Congenital Heart Disease Research and Training Center, Hektoen Institute for Medical Research; and the Departments of Medicine, Radiology, Pediatrics and Pathology, University of Chicago School of Medicine; and the Departments of Pathology, Northwestern University Medical School and the University of Illinois College of Medicine
2 Assistant Professor of Radiology, University of Chicago School of Medicine
3 Associate Professor of Medicine and Bioehemistry and Director, Cardiopulmonary Laboratory, University of Chicago School of Medicine
4 Professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Chicago School of Medicine
5 Director, Congenital Heart Disease Research and Training Center, Hektoen Institute for Medical Research; Professor of Pathology Northwestern University Medical School; Professorial Lecturer, University of Chicago School of Medicine; Lecturer in Pathology, University of Illinois College of Medicine

A case of "Taussig-Bing complex with pulmonary stenosis" is presented clinically and pathologically accompanied by pathologic reports of two other cases. The infundibular stenosis was explained as an uncommon variant of the Taussig-Bing complex related to compression of the pulmonary infundibulum between the septal and first parietal bands.







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