CVPR 04-02-14 10-11am Aortic and Pulmonary Valve Disease - Salcedo Flashcards

1
Q

Aortic valve anatomy

A

Aortic root just behind pulmonary artery; Aortic valve in center of heart, behind pulmonic valve & in front of mitral & tricuspid valves…. Three cusps/flaps (left & right where left & right coronary arteriess exit + N?)

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2
Q

Aortic Stenosis – mechanism

A

The mechanism by which a healthy tricuspid aortic valve becomes stenotic is believed to be similar to that of atherosclerosis….. become stenotic in 6th-8th decades of life, mainly caused by calcium deposits in the valve cusps and NOT by fusion of the commissures.

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3
Q

Aortic stenosis & Rheumatic fever

A

Rheumatic fever is very rarely the cause of aortic stenosis in developed countries; when it is, mitral valve is almost always affected as well.

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4
Q

Dx of Aortic Stenosis

A
  1. Listen to the patient….. 2. Echocardiogram w/ Doppler interrogation of aortic valve = mainstay of Dx
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5
Q

Therapy for Aortic Stenosis

A

Valve replacement is recommended for individuals w/SYMPTOMATIC SEVERE aortic stenosis (dire prognosis)… may be mechanical or bioprosthetic replacement (can’t repair) – choice depends on age of pt, others [bioprosthesis wears out, so not recommended in young; however, its advantage is that you don’t need warfarin as you would w/a mechanical replacement]

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6
Q

Cardinal Symptoms of Severe Aortic Stenosis

A

Angina, Syncope & Shortness of Breath (HF)….. as soon as symptoms occurs, marked downhill curve in survival

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7
Q

Aortic stenosis – cardiac findings

A

Often cardiac hypertrophy, b/c left ventricle must work harder to get blood out into the aorta

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8
Q

Pathophysiology of calcific aortic stenosis

A

Same risk factors as CAD/atherosclerosis – lipids, HTN, Male gender, Smoking, Diabetes, etc…. proceeds through a process similar to atherosclerosis (cholesterol deposits get calcified)

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9
Q

Bernoulli Equation in Echocardiograms

A

How we measure velocity of red cells … from that estimate pressure gradients through aortic valve (when gradient = ~20, call aortic stenosis) … can also calculate aortic valve area

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10
Q

Bicuspid Aortic Valve disease (BAV) – pathophysiology

A

Two of the three cusps are fused (usually left & right leaflets) = bicuspid instead of tricuspid… Some problem/deficiency with elastic fibers in laminae of aortic media

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11
Q

Bicuspid Aortic Valve disease (BAV) – associations

A

Most common congenital cardiac defect (1-2% of babies)… Can be found in isolation, but often associated w/dilation of proximal ascending aorta secondary to abnormalities of the aortic media.

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12
Q

Bicuspid Aortic Valve disease (BAV) – associated problems

A

After its development, BAV is associated with aortic stenosis, aortic dilation, aneurysms, and dissection… Thus, BAVs should be considered a disease of the entire aortic root.

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13
Q

Hereditary Bicuspid Aortic Valve Disease (BAV)

A

Familial clustering = autosomal dominant inheritance w/reduced penetrance….. Males are affected 4:1….. Echocardiographic screening of first-degree relatives is warranted.

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14
Q

Valvular Complications of BAV:

A
  1. Aortic stenosis (AS age 15-65= BAV; AS more rapid in asymetric valves or antero-posterior)….. 2. Aortic Insufficiency (Cusp prolapsed, etc) ….. 3. Predisposition for Endocarditis, esp. in young pts & pts w/AI
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15
Q

Vascular Complications of BAV:

A
  1. Aortic dilation….. 2. Aneurysm formation….. 3. Aortic dissection (Coarctaction, PDA, Coronary anomalies)
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16
Q

Risk factors for Adverse Cardiac Events in Adutls w/BAV disease

A

Age 30yrs; Moderate/severe aortic insufficiency; Moderate/severe aortic stenosis

17
Q

Management of BAV

A

Mild-to-moderate valvular dysfunction & normal LV dimensions/function = Regular echocardiography of aortic valve to evaluate its functional state & measure aortic diameter, chamber dimensions, & ventricular function

18
Q

Other Forms of Aortic Stenosis - Subvalvular disease

A
  1. Thin membrane (the most common lesion), 2. Thick fibromuscular ridge, 3. Diffuse tunnel-like obstruction, 4. Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy, 5. Abnormal mitral valve attachments, and 6. Accessory endocardial cushion tissue
19
Q

Aortic regurgitation – causes of valvular disease

A

Valvular disease (Rheumatic, Degenerative, Endocarditis, Congenital - Bicuspid/Quadricuspid)

20
Q

Aortic regurgitation – causes of disease of the aorta

A

Disease of the aorta (Dissection, Marfan’s, Atherosclerosis, Annulo-aortic ectasia, Syphilis, Ankylosing spondilitis, Osteogenesis imperfect)

21
Q

Aortic regurgitation – sound

A

High pitched, like huff (like mom when she eat hot food…NOT like low pitched blowing out)

22
Q

Signs of aortic regurgitation

A

Corrigan’s pulse (rapid forceful carotid upstroke followed by rapid decline)… Quincke’s pulse (diastolic blanching in nail bed when slightly compressed)… de Musset’s sign (bobbing of head)… Durozie’s sign (systolic & diastolic femoral bruits when compressed w/stethoscope)… Hill’s sign (systolic BP in legs >30mmHg than in arms)

23
Q

Therapy for aortic insufficiency/regurgitation

A

Severe AI = surgery (valve replacement)

24
Q

Pulmonic stenosis - when IDed

A

A common forms of congenital heart disease…. Most pts are children, though pts w/congenital pulmonic stenosis may come to medical attention during adolescence or adulthood

25
Q

Pulmonic stenosis – management

A

Recently, percutaneous balloon valvuloplasty has largely replaced surgical valvotomy except in pts w/ dysplastic valves