This paper reports a retrospective study of 21 children with atrioventricular and ventriculo-arterial discordance, or double discordance, associated with a large ventricular septal defect responsible for pulmonary hypertension. Other associated congenital defects were: atrioventricular block (5 cases), coarctation of the aorta with neonatal cardiac failure (6 cases), tricuspid valve malformations responsible for significant tricuspid regurgitation (11 cases) and right ventricular hypoplasia (1 case). Two children died before any therapeutic intervention, one from syncope related to atrioventricular block and the other after a decision of therapeutic abstention. Three children underwent total correction with one good result (the only case of situs inversus), one late death and one lost to follow-up. The majority of patients (n = 16) underwent initial palliative surgery consisting in pulmonary artery banding occasionally associated with reconstruction of the aortic arch: there was no early mortality but there were 2 late deaths. Of the 14 survivors, 6 are well after a mean follow-up period of 31 months. Eight underwent open heart surgery with 1 operative death, 6 post-operative complete atrioventricular blocks requiring cardiac pacing and 5 poor results due to aggravation or secondary tricuspid regurgitation leading to 1 cardiac transplantation (death) and 2 reoperations for valvular surgery (1 plasty and 1 tricuspid valve replacement). The overall results of this series are poor: high mortality (33 per cent) and equally high morbidity when direct surgery is undertaken. Two major complications are observed: complete atrioventricular block (55 per cent) and regurgitation of the systemic atrioventricular valve (45 per cent), both of which often necessitate invalidating complementary procedures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)