Patho: Valvular Heart Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Determine if the following affect the function of the semilunar valves or the AV valves:

1) leaflets
2) cusps
3) cuspal attachments
4) tendinous cords
5) papillary muscles

A

1) AV
2) semilunar
3) semilunar
4) AV
5) AV

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2
Q

Histology

Layer at the outflow: ___
Proteoglycan rich: ___
Rich in elastin for prompt valve closure: ___

A

Fibrosa - dense, collagenous, maintain structure
Spongiosa - lightly-staining
Ventricularis/Atrialis - inflow; has collagen for mechanical integrity

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3
Q

Identify this cell:

Most abundant cell type in valves
Synthesize ECM
Produce matrix-degrading enzymes
Produce inhibitors

A

Interstitial cells

Note: blood supply through diffusion since valves are thin

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4
Q

Diseases and their type of acquired valvular diseases

1) rheumatic heart disease: ___
2) calcific aortic stenosis: ___
3) mitral valve prolapse

A

1) fibrotic thickening
2) nodular calcification
3) damage to collagen

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5
Q

Identify which type of nodular calcification:

1) progressive calcification, has a midline raphe
2) most common; etiologic cause is age-associated wear-and-tear; deposition of hydroxyapatite
3) degenerative calcific deposits at fibrous annulus

A

1) Calcific Stenosis of Congenitally Bicuspid Aortic Valve (BAV) - predisposed to other cardiac conditions e.g. aortic dilation & dissections, infective endocarditis, aortic insufficiency
2) Calcific Aortic Stenosis - mounded calcified nodules on the outflow surface; commissural fissure not seen
3) Mitral Annular Calcification - complications: nodules can provide site of thrombus formation; arrhythmia

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6
Q

Most frequent cause of pure, isolated mitral regurgitation

A

Mitral Valve Prolapse/Myxomatous Degeneration of the Mitral Valve - leaflet/s ballon back during systole

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7
Q

T/F: In mitral valve prolapse, there is an audible click associated with late systolic murmur.

A

True: mid-systolic, non-ejection click

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8
Q

Involves myxomatous degeneration of the spongiosa layer

A) calcified aortic stenosis
B) rheumatic heart disease
C) mitral stenosis
D) mitral valve prolapse

A

Answer is D.
increased deposition of highly sulfated hydrophilic matrix → associated marked thickening of the spongiosa layer → associated attenuation of the collagenous fibrosa layer → compromised structural integrity

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9
Q

T/F: MVP is not a predisposing factor for thrombus formation and infective endocarditis.

A

False

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10
Q

Acute, immunologically mediated, multisystem inflammatory disease involving fibrotic thickening. Usually occurs after a GAS pharyngitis episode.

A

Rheumatic fever - pathogenesis involves antibody binding and T-cell mediated reaction

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11
Q

JONES criteria: _____

Need 2 major manifestation os 1 major and 2 minor (fever, arthralgia, elevated levels of acute phase reactants)

A
J - joints: migratory polyarthritis
O - looks like the heart -> pancarditis
N - (subcutaneous) nodules
E - erythema marginatum of the skin
S - Syndenham chorea (involuntary, rapid, purposeless movement
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12
Q

Acute rheumatic carditis: Identify which carditis (pan-, endo-, etc.)

1) inflammation in all layers
2) involves pericardial effusion
3) involves Aschoff nodules
4) fibrinoid necrosis within cusps & tendinous chords
5) can cause cardiac dilation
6) usually involves left-sided valves

A

1) pan-
2) peri- (with fibrinoid pericarditis)
3) myo-
4) endo-
5) myo-
6) endo-

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13
Q

Number one cause of rheumatic mitral stenosis; “fish mouth” or “buttonhole” stenosis

A) acute rheumatic carditis
B) fibrinoid pericarditis
C) chronic rheumatic carditis
D) rheumatic fever

A

Answer is C.

Chronic rheumatic carditis: clinically manifests years or decades after initial episode of rheumatic fever

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14
Q

Microbial infection of the heart/mural endocardium leading to vegetation; often associated with destruction of underlying cardiac tissues

A

Infective endocarditis

Note: Usually for IE, there’s an infection somewhere else in your body and then the microorganisms get into the heart and adhere to the thrombus

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15
Q

T/F: The usual underlying condition prior to aortic stenosis is heart diseases that manifests with turbulence, trauma, and stasis.

A

F. Aortic stenosis -> infective endocarditis

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16
Q

Traditional classification of IE:

1) insidious infection of a structurally abnormal valve by low virulent organism
2) infection from a previously healthy individual, through a highly virulent organism

A

1) subacute IE

2) acute IE - rapidly produces necrotizing destructive lesions

17
Q
Most common agent in prosthetic valve IE:
A) Streptococcus viridans
B) Staphylococcus epidermidis
C) Eikenella
D) Enterococci
A

Answer is B.

18
Q

What is EHACEK?

A

Drugs. Enterococci, hemophilus, actinobacillus, cardiobacterium, eikenella, kingella, gram-negative bacilli, fungi

19
Q

Hallmark feature of IE (gross morphology): ___

A

vegetations on heart valves

20
Q

Role of lab diagnostic tests

1) Determines proper antibiotic therapy, confirms presence of microorganism in the circulation
2) For monitoring response to treatment

A

1) Blood culture

2) Inflammatory markers

21
Q

Mnemonic for systemic complications of IE: FROM JANE

A

Fever, roth spots, osler nodes, murmur, Janeway lesions, anemia, nail-bed hemorrhage, emboli

22
Q

No associated tissue destruction & resulting complications: which type of IE?

A

Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE)

IE involves tissue destruction

23
Q

Which type of endocarditis: immune complex deposition in the valves results in complement activation and recruitment of FC-receptor-bearing cells (neutrophils, macrophages)

A

Libman-Sacks Disease (Endocarditis of SLE)

24
Q

Syndrom marked by flushing, diarrhea, dermatitis, bronchoconstriction

Typically occur when there is a massive hepatic metastatic burden

A

Carcinoid syndrome - caused by bioactive compounds released by carcinoid tumors

Carcinoid heart disease

25
Q

Based on gross morphology/histology, identify type of valvular disease:

1) Glistening, white intimal plaque-like thickening of endocardial surfaces
2) Bland thrombus; thrombotic vegetations
3) Organized inflammation; post-inflammatory neovascularization

A

1) carcinoid heart disease
2) nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis
3) chronic rheumatic carditis