Valvular disease Flashcards

1
Q

Discuss clinical features of IE

A

Fever
Malaise
(Weakness, myalgias, back pain, dyspnea, chest pain, cough, headache, anorexia)
Murmur
Vsaculitic lesions (petechia, splinter haemorrahge, janeway lesions)
Immunological (Osloers)
Roth spots

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2
Q

Discuss risk factors for the development of IE

A
Age > 60
Male 
IVDU
poor dentition or dental infection 
Structural heart disease
Valvular disease 
Congenital heart disease
Prosthetic heart valves
Trancatheter aortic valve replacement 
History of IE 
Intravascualr device
Cardiac implantable electonic device
Chronic HD  
HIV
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3
Q

Discuss microbiology of IE

A

1) IVUDA
- staph aureas - MRSA
- Strep vridans
- pseudomonas
- often polymicrobial

2) IVDU with HIV
- unusual organisms such as salmonella, listeria, bartonella

3) T2DM
- Staph

4) Prosthetic valves <2months
- staph, epidermidis, aureas
- enterococcus

5) prostehetic valve >2 months
- Staph aureas
- strep viridans

HACEK (Haemophilus, aggregatibacter, cardiobacterium hominus, eikenella corrodens, kingella kingae)
Other
Polymicrobial

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4
Q

Discuss ix of IE

A
FBC - leukocytosis non specific 
ESR
CRP
Mild anaemia 
Urine for microscopic haematuria as a result of embolic lesions of the kidney 
Culture ideally x3

CXR (failure, embolic disease)

ECHO, high specificty but sensitivity can be poor due to obsesity, COPD and chest wall deformities
TOE eliminates these and is superior in diagnosis

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5
Q

DIscuss DUKEs criteria

A

Pathological criteria

  • pathologic lesions - vegetation or intracardiac abscess demonstrating active endocarditis on histology
  • Micro-organism - demenstrated by culture or histology of a vegetation or intracardiac abscess

CLinical

Definite endocarditis: considered definite if any one of the following is present

  • Two major clinical
  • one major and 3 minor
  • fiver minor

Possible:

  • One major and one or two minor clinical criteria
  • three minor clinical criteria

Major criteria
#Positve blood cultures
-Typical micro-organisms consistent with IE from 2 seperate blood cultures (staph, viridans strep, strep gallolyticus, HACEK)
-Persistently positive blood culture
-single positive blood culture for coxiella burnetii or phase 1 IgG antibody titre
#evidecne of endocardial involvement by ECHO such as
—-endocardial vegetation
—- paravalvular abscess
—- new partial dehiscence of prosthetic valve
—-New valvular regurg

Minor
#Predisposption (heart condition or IVDU) 
#Fever
#Vascular phenomena (arterial emboli, septic pulmonary infarct, mycotic aneurysm, conjunctival haemorrahge, or janeway) 
#Immunological phenomena (osler's node, Roth's spot and rheumatoid factor) 
#Micro evidence - single blood culture (except for coagulase -ve staph -does not cause IE)
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6
Q

Discuss management of IE

A

Native valve

  • Benpen 1.8g q4 hourly
  • Fluclox 2g q4 hourly
  • Gentamicin 5-7mg/kg

Native vlave MRSA
- ad above but replace ben pen with Vanc 25-30mg/kg

Non native valve or implantable device

  • Vanc 25-30mg/kg
  • fluclox 2 g Q4 hourly
  • Gentamycin

Anaphylaxis to penicillin replace fluclox with cephazolin 2 g

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7
Q

Discuss mitral stenosis

A

The most common cause of mitral stenosis is RHD
Symptoms of valvular dysfunction typically develop after a latency period of 1-3 decards.

The normal cross sectional area of the mitralv valve is 4-6cm2, stenosis becomes signifiacnt below 2cm2

Impeded flow from the left atrium to the left ventricle results in left atrial hypertension restricted CO and ultimately pulmonary congestion.

The most common complication of mitral stenosis is AF wchihc in the absence of rate control si not well toelrated. Patients with mitral stenosis will decompensate under other condition associated with increased cardiac demand and reduced ventricular filling such as pregnancy anaemia infection and hyperthyroidism .

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8
Q

Discuss clinical features and management of mitral stenosis

A

Early symptoms include reduced exercise toleracne and dyspnea on exertion.

Patient with more advanced disease may have orthopnea and if RV failure is present peripheral oedema
Haemoptysis caused by rupture fo the bronchial vein and hoarsens caused by compression of the recurrent layrngeal nerve are classic but uncommon finding

Typical signs of heart failure present in later disease
HS are charachterised by a loud S1 an opening snap and in early diastole accompanoied by a low pitched rumbling diastolic apical murmur

Management
-diuresis for vascular congestion and anticoagulation for af

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9
Q

Breifly discuss mitral regurg

A

ACute MR is a mediacl emergency seen most commonly in the setting of MI and pap muscle rupture – presents with fulminant pulmonary oedema

Chronci MR is seen in dilated CMX

Causea

  • IE
  • Pap muscle disorder (ischaemia or infarct, trauma, infiltrative disease)
  • Rupture of the chordae (RF, iE, Trauma)
  • mitral leaflet disorder (IE, myxomatous degenr)
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10
Q

Discuss aortic stenosis

A

The most common cause of AS is calcific degneration - occurs mainly in older patient but is seen in a younger age group with biscup valves

The normal aortic valve area is larger than 3cm2 - significant obstruction occurs when the valve area is reduced by more than 50%/ Critcal aoritc stenosis is defined as a valve area of less than 0.8cm2

Compensatory LVH can maintain CO until the AS becomes severe. Indiviuals with severe or critical AS are preload dependant and have very little CVS reserve

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11
Q

Discuss clinical features of AS

A

Classic symptoms of AS progress from angina to exertional syncope to heart failure.

Crescendo decrescendo systolic murmur best heard at the base(right second intercostal space) that radiates into the carotids and is assocaited with the presence of an S4 gallop and a soft aoritc componenet o.
Counterintuitively as the severity of the disase increases the murmur peaks later and becomes less pronounced

ECG:- LVH

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12
Q

Discuss aortic insufficiency

A

Causes include RHD, IE or the presence of bicuspid valve. Aortic abnormalities such as ectasia, aneurysm or dissection can lead to aortic insufficiency

Can rpeent with severe respiraotyr distress or frank cardiogenic shock.

Clinical finding incoude rapidly rising and falling carotid pulse (water hamer) spontaneous nail bed pulsations or a to and fro murmur over the femoral artery,

A high pitched blowing diastolic murmur at the left sternal border is characteristic of chronic aortic insufficiency

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