Currently, approximately 85% of children with significant congenital heart problems survive to adolescence and adulthood. This survival rate represents a dramatic improvement in the medical and surgical care of congenital heart disease (CHD) during the last 35 years. Nevertheless, these patients remain at increased risk for significant cardiac problems long after primary interventions are completed. They are more likely than the general population to seek urgent medical care, often in an emergency department setting. They represent a new and growing population of emergency department patients with a specialized set of problems not traditionally part of the training for emergency medicine (EM) physicians.