Mitral Valve Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the components of the mitral valve?

A
Mitral annulus
Anterior and posterior leaflets
Chordae tendineae
Papillary muscles
LV wall
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2
Q

What is by far the most common cause of mitral valve stenosis?

A

Rheumatic heart disease

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3
Q

What happens to the mitral valve in the case of rheumatic heart disease?

A

Fusion of valve cusps

Fibrosis and calcification of valve leaflets

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4
Q

How does the fused valve in mitral stenosis appear on echo?

A

Hockey stick

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5
Q

What occurs hemodynamically in mitral stenosis?

A

Increase in pressure gradient between LA and LV

Increased LA pressure –> increased pulmonary venous and capillary pressure

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6
Q

What symptoms occur with mitral valve stenosis?

A
Fatigue 
Dyspnea on exertion
Shortness of breath
Orthopnea
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea

Basically symptoms of congestive heart failure

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7
Q

What is a possible side effect due to the dilation of the LA?

A

Atrial fibrillation may result

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8
Q

What is the hemodynamic result of the increased pulmonary venous and capillary pressure in some patients?

A

Increased pulmonary arteriolar resistance –> increased pulmonary artery pressure –> increased RV pressure –> RV failure

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9
Q

What are additional clinical symptoms of mitral valve stenosis that can occur in some patients that develop RV failure?

A
Atrial fibrillation
Pulmonary hypertension
Right sided heart failure
- Edema, GI , Liver congestion, ascites
Hoarseness
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10
Q

What are physical findings of mitral stenosis?

A

Mitral facies (purplish, ruddy cheeks) - “classic” but never seen
Normal arterial pulse
Normal apical impulse
Normal jugular venous pressure

All normal until pulmonary hypertension develops

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11
Q

What will be heard on auscultation of mitral stenosis?

A

Opening snap
Diastolic low-pitched murmur
Loud S1

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12
Q

Describe what is causing the opening snap of mitral stenosis

A

Sudden tensing of valve leaflets during opening causes another sound after S2 (during diastole)

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13
Q

Describe what is causing the low-pitched diastolic murmur in mitral stenosis

A

Low pressure gradient between LA and LV

May crescendo right before S1 with LA contraction

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14
Q

Describe what is causing the Loud S1 in mitral stenosis

A

Presystolic accentuation of the low-pitched murmur

Caused by contraction of the LA

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15
Q

What sign of mitral stenosis can you see on an xray?

A

Left atrial enlargement

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16
Q

What causes primary mitral valve regurgitation?

A

Problems with any of the mitral valve components, not one specifically

17
Q

What causes secondary mitral valve regurgitation?

A

Dilation of the LV and the annulus

18
Q

What occus hemodynamically in mitral valve regurgitation

A

Elevation of LA volume and pressure –> LA dilation
Reduction in forward output
Volume-related stress on LV –> LV dilation

19
Q

What is the difference between chronic and acute mitral regurgitation?

A

Chronic - occurs over time, LA dilates - increased compliance, less elevated pressure in LA

Acute - occurs acutely, LA doesn’t have time to dilate - normal compliance, sudden high pressure in LA –> pulmonary edema

20
Q

What are clinical manifestations of mitral regurgitation?

A

Heart failure

Fatigue 
Dyspnea on exertion
Shortness of breath
Orthopnea
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
21
Q

What are physical findings of mitral regurgitation?

A

Holosystolic murmur
S3
Hyperdynamic apex with palpable thrill

22
Q

What is causing the holosystolic murmur hear in mitral regurgitation?

A

Regurgitation throughout systole

Stays the same, no crescendo

23
Q

What is causing the S3 in mitral regurgitation?

A

Large volume going into ventricle stops suddenly

24
Q

What is a phrase that can be used to remember the sounds heard in mitral regurgitation?

A

“slush-ing in”

Slush = S1, ing = S2, in = S3

25
Q

What is a summation gallop?

A

When S3 and S4 exist very close together, they sound like a murmur

26
Q

What happens to the valve in mitral valve prolapse?

A

Billowing of leaflets into LA (looks like parachute) due to loose myxomatous tissue replacing the normal dense collagen and elastin matrix of the valve leaflets

27
Q

What causes the myxomatous degeneration of the leaflets?

A

Inherited as autosomal dominant disorder
OR
Associated with connective tissue diseases like Marfan’s or Ehlers-Danlos

28
Q

What are symptoms of mitral prolapse?

A

None, unless develop some mitral regurgitation

29
Q

What can you hear upon auscultation in mitral prolapse?

A

Mid to late systolic click - when leaflets billow back up
Late systolic murmur

MOST IMPORTANT: the timing of these changes with maneuvers

30
Q

Will you hear the click and murmur of mitral prolapse earlier when standing or lying down?

A

Standing

Less volume (pressure) in left ventricle when standing - won’t need to contract as much to reach pressure when click occurs

31
Q

Will you hear the click and murmur of mitral prolapse earlier when squating or lying down?

A

Lying down

Squat causes left ventricle to expand - will need to contract more to reach pressure when click occurs than if lying down

32
Q

What can occur if the elongated chordae in mitral prolapse rupture?

A

Get severe acute mitral regurgitation

Flail leaflet