Cardiovascular 2 Flashcards

1
Q

congestive heart failure definition

A

chf is failure of the heart to pump an adequate amt of blood to supply the metabolic requirements of the organs. chf may be due to pathologic conditions inside or outside the heart

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2
Q

chf epidemiology

A

affects nearly 5 million people in the US annually- contributes to 300000 deaths

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3
Q

what are the compensatory mechanisms

A

activation of neurohumoral systems- release of norepinephrine with increased heart rate and contractility
activation of renin-angiotensin system with water/salt retention- increased circulatory volume
frank starling mechanism- increased end-diastolic filling volume stretches cardiac muscle fibers. at first the fibers contract more forcefully increasing cardiac output (compensated heart failure) but eventually they cannot keep up (Decompensated heart failure)
myocardial hypertrophy- increase in muscle fiber size, resulting in increased thickness of the ventricular wall but without increase in the size of the lumen

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4
Q

does compensatory mechanisms work?

A

usually fail due to increased oxygen requirements of myocardium but without increased capillary supply- resulting in susceptibility to ischemia

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5
Q

etiology of chf

A
ischemic heart disease
hypertension
myocarditis
cardiomyopathy
valvular disease
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6
Q

what are the causes of right sided heart failure

A
left sided heart failure
subsequent pulmonary congestion leads to increased pulmonary arterial pressure
pulmonary hypertension (cor pulmonale)
valve disease
septal defects with left to right shunts
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7
Q

manifestations of chf

right ventricular failure

A

congestion of liver (zonal or nutmeg pattern) and spleen

edema of subcutaneous tissue (feet and ankles)

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8
Q

manifestations of chf

left ventricular failure

A

pulmonary edema and congestion, resulting in dyspnea, chronic cough, orthopnea

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9
Q

manifestations of chf

left and/or right ventricular failure

A

cerebral hypoxia

chf due to left ventricular failure eventually leads to right ventricular failure

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10
Q

congenital heart disease definition

A

congenital heart diseases may be caused by chromosomal anomalies or environmental factors
divided into cyanotic and noncyanotic forms
cyanotic forms generally have shunting of poorly-oxygenated systemic venous return to systemic arterial circulation, bypassing the lungs.
congenital heart disease include shunts (abnormal communication between chambers), abnormal connections between chambers and blood vessels, and absence of normal connections

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11
Q

epidemiology of congenital heart disease

A

6-8/1000 live births in the US-

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12
Q

causes of congenital heart disease

A

environmental factors (eg congenital rubella, maternal diabetes)
chromosomal abnormalities
90% are unknown and likely multifactorial

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13
Q

common examples of noncyanotic

A

atrial septal defect- allows shunting between the atria- 2nd most common congenital malformation
ventricular septal defect- allows shunting between the ventricles- most common of cardiac malformations- 4/1000 live births
patent ductus arteriosus- this should close within a few days after birth and connects the aorta and pulmonary artery

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14
Q

common examples of cyanotic

A

tetralogy of fallot- 4 anomalies include- ventricular septal defect, narrowing of right ventricular outflow, overriding of the aorta over vsd, right ventricular hypertrophy

transposition of the great arteries- the right ventricle empties into the aorta, the left ventricle empties into the pulmonary artery

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15
Q

ischemic heart disease (IHD) definition

A

group of related disorders that are all characterized by imbalance between myocardial blood supply and myocardial oxygen demand (ischemia)
primarily (>90%) due to coronary artery atherosclerosis (coronary artery disease)

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16
Q

ischemic heart disease epidemiology

A

leading cause of death in US- 500000 annually

17
Q

pathogenesis of ischemic heart disease

A

narrowing of coronary arteries (usually at least 75%) by atherosclerosis
gradual narrowing may lead to opening of collateral arteries
coronary artery thrombosis initiated by fissure in the fibrous cap of an atherosclerotic plaque
other factors- increased myocardial oxygen demand (hypertension), diminished blood volume (hypotension/shock), reduced oxygenation (pneumonia, CHF), reduced oxygen-carrying capacity (anemia)

18
Q

types of IHD

A

angina pectoris-
acute myocardial infarction
chronic IHD with CHF
sudden cardiac death

19
Q

angina pectoris

A

intermittent chest pain caused by transient reversible myocardial ischemia
chest pain of several minutes duration usually associated with exercise or emotional stress and relieved by rest
no myocardial necrosis occurs. in unstable angina- episodes of chest pain become more frequent and pain becomes more severe- longer lasting than stable angina- often precedes more serious ischemia or MI
stable angina- occurs predictably at certain levels of exertion- crushing or squeezing substernal pain that may radiate down the left arm or jaw (referred pain) relieved by rest or sublingual nitroglycerin (vasodilator to increase coronary perfusion)

20
Q

acute myocardial infarction

A

necrosis of cardiac muscle caused by ischemia
acute coronary artery thrombosis secondary to artherosclerosis
1.5 mil MI annually in US 1/3 die
severe ischemia lasting longer than 20-40 mins will cause irreversible myocyte injury and cell death
myocardial ischemia also contributes to arrhythmias probably because ischemic regions cause electrical instability (irritability)- may lead to ventricular fibrillation

21
Q

clinical presentation of MI

A

chest pain, shortness of breath, nausea/vomiting, diaphoresis, low grade fever

22
Q

what diagnostic tests for MI

A

ECG changes
elevation of serum enzymes (creatine kinase; ck-mb) and troponin derived necrotic myocytes
MI less than 12 hr old are usually not grossly apparent at autopsy
at 12-24 hours, infarcted area appears reddish blue

23
Q

pathology of MI

A
coagulation necrosis (few hours)
neutrophil infiltration (few days)
granulation tissue (1 week)
scar formation (wk-mos)
24
Q

treatment of MI

A

stents to open the coronary arteries clogged by artherosclerotic plaques
coronary artery by pass grafts (CABG) or clot busting drugs such as tissue plasminogen activator (TPA/streptokinase
reperfusion injury is a risk of these treatments

25
Q

complications of MI

A
arrhythmia and sudden death
CHF/shock
mural thrombus/emboli
myocardial rupture
mitral valve regurgitation
ventricular aneurysm
infarct expansion to involve right ventricle
chronic ischemic heart disease
26
Q

chronic ischemic heart disease

A

progressive heart failure due to ischemic myocardial damage
usually a history of MI
arrhythmia, CHF and subsequent MI lead to many deaths

27
Q

chronic IHD with CHF

A

progressive cardiac decompensation following acute MI or secondary to smaller ischemic events with eventual mechanical pump

28
Q

sudden cardiac death

A

sudden onset of ischemia-induced cardiac arrhythmia with or without myocardial necrosis (infarction)
this may occur in individuals with or without a previous history of IHD - most common cause is IHD (80-90%)
younger patients- congenital coronary artery abnormalities, aortic valve stenosis; mitral valve prolapse; myocarditis; dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; pulmonary hypertension; myocardial hypertrophy

29
Q

cardiomyopathy classfication

A

primary- the disease is solely or predominantly confined to the heart muscle
secondary- the heart is involved as part of a multisystem disorder
three morphologic patterns of cardiomyopathy: dilated, hypertrophic and restrictive

30
Q

dilated cardiomyopathy

A

heterogenous group of cardiac diseases which may be primary or secondary, genetic or acquired
hereditary basis in 20-50% of cases- related to alcoholism, myocarditis (viral?), pregnancy
dilation of all 4 heart chambers
histology shows variable fibrosis and myocyte hypertrophy
poor ventricular contractility (systolic dysfunction)

31
Q

hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

A

primary genetic cardiomyopathy
missense point mutation in one of several sarcomeric gene loci
disorder of sarcomeric proteins (myosin, myosin binding protein C, troponin T)
inherited as autosomal dominant with variable expression
inappropriate (spontaneous) myocardial hypertrophy, asymmetric hypertrophy which is greater in the interventricular septum than the left ventricular free wall and often obstructs the left ventricular outflow tract
stiff ventricles prevent adequate filling (diastolic dysfunction)
characteristic histology is disarray of cardiac myocytes and fibrosis

32
Q

restrictive cardiomyopathy

A

decrease in ventricular compliance (walll is stiffer) resulting in impaired ventricular filling during diastole
can be idiopathic or associated with other conditions that happen to affect the myocardium, such as radiation fibrosis, amyloidosis, hemochromatosis, and sarcoidosis

33
Q

myocarditis etiology

A

inflammation involving the myocardium
pyogenic bacteria: abscesses
viruses: interstitial mononuclear inflammatory cells with myocyte necrosis (coxsackie A and B)
parasites: in individual myocytes or interstitium with adjacent inflammation (chagas disease in s america)
hypersensitivity: often to drugs,perivascular inflammation with eosinophils
most common cause in the united states is viral infection
in some cases the etiology is unknown

34
Q

pathology of myocarditis

A

viral infection produces a lymphocytic infiltrate with foci of necrosis
pyogenic bacteria cause abscesses
parasites (such as trypanosomes in chagas disease- found in south america) infect individual myocytes or are in interstitial areas with surrounding inflammatory cells
hypersentivity (usually to drugs) causes a perivascular inflammatory infiltrate with many eosinophils