Heart Failure II - Diagnosis & Treatment Flashcards

1
Q

3 major pathophysiology causes of HF

A

↓ Cardiac output
↑ Pulmonary venous pressure
↑ Central venous pressure (Right-sided)

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2
Q

Decreased CO (low flow) can result in what 5 major effects

A

↓ cerebral perfusion

↓ muscle perfusion

↓ gut perfusion

↓ kidney perfusion

exercise intolerance

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3
Q

INCREASED LEFT-SIDED FILLING PRESSURES = ??

And how can that present?

A

↑ Pulmonary venous pressure

  • Breathlessness (dyspnea)
  • Dyspnea on exertion
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4
Q

In HF what one major cost of a small increase in stroke volume?

A

LARGE RISE IN END-DIASTOLIC PRESSURE

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5
Q

Orthopnea

A

Immediate SOB when lying flat

Relates to lost venous pooling of blood in the legs

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6
Q

Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (PND)

  • what is it?
  • how is it resolved?
A

attacks of severe shortness of breath and coughing that generally occur at night

– Delayed SOB, which wakes patients from sleep
– Classically patient gets out of bed and ambulates to relieve symptoms
– Relates to mobilization of edema from tissue through lymphatics back into blood stream

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7
Q

Acute pulmonary edema

  • what is it?
  • symptom?
  • x - ray findings?
A

– Occurs once fluid retention / left atrial pressure overwhelms compensatory mechanisms (e.g. lymphatic fluid return)
– Fluid spills from the pulmonary vasculature into the interstitial space and then into the alveoli, producing hypoxia

– Acute intense shortness of breath
– Increase vascular prominence on CXR (chest x ray) first, followed by“fluffy” infiltrates

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8
Q

INCREASED RIGHT-SIDED FILLING PRESSURES = ?

A
  • Peripheral swelling / dependent edema
  • Ascites
  • Hepatic congestion
  • Intestinal congestion (protein-losing enteropathy)
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9
Q

SIGNS OF ELEVATED LEFT-SIDED FILLING PRESSURES

A
  Rales (pulmonary crackles)
    - Sounds like Velcro pulling apart on inspiration, Due to wet alveoli opening
 Hypoxia
 Tachypnea
 Breath better Sitting bolt upright
 Popping open of alveoli
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10
Q

SIGNS OF ELEVATED RIGHT-SIDED PRESSURES

A

 Edema
= follows gravity (legs, sacrum, scrotum)
 Hepatic congestion / hepatomegaly
 Jugular venous distention (JVD) = ↑ central
venous pressure (CVP)

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11
Q

Normal JVP vs abnormal

A

Normal is < 5 cm H2O, so jugular vein is typically collapsed – with a person standing up, only the carotid pulsation should be visible (brisk upstroke during systole only)

 With a person with JVD in HF, the jugular vein (internal and external) fill with blood. Thus the neck veins will appear full on visual examination. More importantly, they will transmit pressure changes in the right atrium as waves.

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12
Q

S3 cause by?

  • what is it?
  • type of HF?
  • cadence
A

S3 gallop is thought to be caused by rapid expansion of the ventricular walls in early diastole
- Typical of HFrEF / dilated heart
 Cadence of “Ken-tuc-ky” (S1-S2-S3)

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13
Q

S4 cause by?

  • what is it?
  • type of HF?
  • cadence
A

S4 gallop is caused by atria contracting forcefully in an effort to overcome an abnormally stiff or hypertrophic LV
 Usually abnormal
 Cadence of “Ten-ne-ssee” (S4-S1-S2)
 By definition, absent in atrial fibrillation

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14
Q
CHEST RADIOGRAPHY (CXR)
in HF
A
  • Enlarged cardiac silhouette in HFrEF
  • Increased upper lobe vascular markings with acute decompensation
  • Fluffy infiltrates of pulmonary edema (not on this image)
  • Pleural effusions
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15
Q

B-type natriuretic (BNP) is secreted by the myocardium in response to

A

Primary: ventricular stretch (measure of preload)
Secondary: hyperadrenergic state, RAAS activation, ischemia

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16
Q

Ejection Fraction (EF)

A

END-DIASTOLIC – END SYSTOLIC VOLUME
_________________________
END-DIASTOLIC VOLUME

*note EDV-ESV = SV

17
Q

SV with regards to ESV and EDV

A

SV = EDV-ESV

18
Q

RIGHT HEART CATHETERIZATION

A

AKA Pulmonary Artery (PA) Catheter, or a Swan-Ganz catheter (or “Swan”)

  • A plastic catheter introduced into one of the major veins and then “floated” through the right heart into the pulmonary artery
19
Q

Hemodynamic equivalent of Ohms law

A

V=IR
ΔP = CO x R

*note: ΔP = mean arterial BP – central venous pressure

20
Q

Difference betwn Diuretics and vasodilators

A

Diuretics are used to keep volume normal (sodium retention is common)

Vasodilators are used to maintain normal blood pressure