Cardio Flashcards

0
Q

Remnant of fetal Umbilical arteries & allantois

A

aa => MediaL umbilical ligaments
(= 2 folds just off midline in anterior abdominal wall), No f(x) in adult

allantois => urachus & mediaN umbilical ligament = duct btwn bladder & belly button, no f(x) in adult.

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1
Q

Remnant of fetal umbilical vein

A

ligamentum teres hepatis

(in falciform ligament, = vertically across anterior side of liver at midpoint) no f(x) in adult.

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2
Q

Remnant of fetal ductus arteriosus

A

Ligamentum arteriosum
(stretches btwn pulmonary artery and aortic arch) no function in adult.
Recurrent laryngeal n. (from vagus) travels just underneath this lig.

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3
Q

Remnant of fetal ductus venosus

A

ligamentum venosum

(on posterior side of liver, near midline) no f(x) in adult.

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4
Q

factors for increased stroke volume of heart

A
  1. increased Contractility
  2. increased Preload
  3. decreased Afterload
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5
Q

factors for increased heart contractility:

A

Increased intracellular Ca2+ => increased muscle action

  1. catecholamines (increase Ca pump @ Sarcoplasmic reticulum)
  2. low soduim (less Na into cell = more Ca stays in cell)
  3. digitalis (blocks Na/Ca2+ pump)
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6
Q

preload measures ?

A

preload measures ventricular End Diastolic Volume
(how much blood entered from venous return during diastole, now needs to be pumped out)
force of contraction is proportional to EDV!

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7
Q

Mockenberg Arteriosclerosis

A

calcification of the MEDIA of arteries, = benign (not obstructive)

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8
Q

Arteriolosclerosis (2 types)

A
  1. Hyaline arteriolosclerosis: thickened small aa. *essential HTN or DM
  2. Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis: “onion skinning” in arteries
    => malignant HTN
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9
Q

Atherosclerosis

A

= fibrous plaques in intima of medium & large muscular aa & elastic aa

  • includes sm. muscle cell migration w/ build-up
    • may have high plasma homocysteine levels
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10
Q

Diseases associated with thoracic aortic aneurysms

A

HTN, cystic medial necrosis (w/ Marfan’s), & tertiary syphilis

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11
Q

Coronary Steal Syndrome

A

aggravation of ischemia by vasodilator
bc shunt blood away from stenosis, & towards higher perfusion area
(but the stenotic area really needs the blood)

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12
Q

Transmural vs. Subendocardial infarctions

A

Transmural: “Full” MI, w/ necrosis affecting entire wall.
= ST elevation or pathologic Q waves (old)
Subendocardial: partial MI (<50% of ventricle wall)
= ST depression

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13
Q

What are some specific visible signs of bacterial endocarditis? (4)

A
  1. Roth spots (white spots on retina w/ surrounding hemorrhage)
  2. Osler’s nodes (tender, raised lesions on fingers or toes)
  3. Janeway lesions (painless, erythematous, on palms or soles)
  4. splinter hemorrhages
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14
Q

Acute Rheumatic fever vs. Late sequelae

A

(type II hypersensitivity rxn after group A B-hemolytic strep infection)
Fever (acute): mitral regurgitation => holosystolic blowing murmur
& mitral valve prolapse => midsystolic click w/ late crescendo murmur

Late: mitral stenosis (or aortic) => diastolic opening snap w/ rumbling murmur

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15
Q

Syphilitic heart disease

A

ascending aorta dilation & wall atrophy bc disrupted vasa vasorum.
=> aortic root calcification & “tree bark” aorta
** risk aneurysm or aortic insufficiency **

16
Q

Pulsus paradoxicus occurs in these cases: (5)

A
  1. severe cardiac tamponade
  2. asthma
  3. obstructive sleep apnea
  4. pericarditis
  5. croup
17
Q

cardiac tamponade

A

compression of heart by fluid in pericardium

=> low CO –> hypotension, JVD, increase HR, pulsus paradoxicus

18
Q

Cases w/ + Kussmaul’s sign: (4)

A

(= abnormal increase in JVP on inspiration – normal = decrease)

  1. constrictive pericarditis
  2. restrictive cardiomyopathies
  3. RA/RV tumors
  4. cardiac tamponade
19
Q

Immune complex-mediated vasculitis types (2)

A
  1. Polyarteritis nodosa (med. vessels esp. renal & GI, w/ neuro Sxs)
  2. Henoch-Schonlein purpura (small vessels, IgA in kids after cold)
20
Q

Large vessel vasculitis types

A

Both: high ESR, granulomatous inflammation.

  1. Takayasu’s arteritis: asian F <40yrs old, weak upper pulses
  2. Temporal arteritis: elderly F, jaw claudication, vision loss
    • assoc. w/ polymyalgia rheumatica
21
Q

Medium vessel vasculitis types (3)

A
  1. Polyarteritis nodosa: fibrinoid necrosis bc ICs *assoc. w/ HepB
  2. Kawasaki disease: asian kids, *desquam rash! & strawb. tongue, risk coronary aneurysm/MI
  3. Buerger’s/thromboangitis obliterans: heavy smokers (M), gangrene of digits! (intermittent claudication)
22
Q

Small vessel vasculitis types (4)

A
  1. Microscopic polyangitis: pANCA, “pauci-immune”
  2. Granulomatosis w/ polyangitis (wegener’s): cANCA,
  3. Churg-Strauss: eosinophilia & IgE; sinusitis & periph. neuropathy
  4. Henoch-Schonlein Purpura: kids after URI, = IgA deposition.
23
Q

3 types of veins in fetus (& what they become in adult)

A
  1. Umbilical – degenerate
  2. Vitelline – portal vein
  3. Cardinal – systemic veins (common cardinal v -> Sup. Vena Cava)
24
Q

Characteristic triad for cardiac tamponade

A
  1. muffled/distant heart sounds
  2. JVD
  3. hypotension
    * also: pulsus paradoxicus
25
Q

cases which present with pulsus paradoxicus

A
  1. cardiac tamponade
  2. constrictive pericarditis
  3. asthma, COPD
  4. Pulmonary Embolism