Pathology of valvular heart disease Flashcards

1
Q

Which side of heart affected by systemic HTN (BP > 140/9))

A

left heart

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2
Q

define essential htn

90%

A

1) idiopathic

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3
Q

define secondary HTN

A

1) renal disease (diabetes/renal artery stenosis)
2) endocrine (adrneal neoplasm, steroids)
3) CV (coarctation

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4
Q

pathogenesis of HTN

A

1) sustained pressure overload on LV
2) hypertrophy of myofibers
3) addl sarcomeres (myofibrils) added

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5
Q

microscopic effects of hypertrophy

A

SAME # OF MYOCYTES

INCR # OF SARCOMERES

nuclei get bigger = box car nuclei

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6
Q

clinical effects of systemic HTN effecting LV

A

1) MAINLY silent

2) HA or dizziness

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7
Q

complications of systemic HTN (LV)

A

1) atherosclerosis/aneruysm
2) cerebral disease = ischemic (arteriosclerosis) or hemorrhage

3) kidney = CHRONIC RENAL DISEASE
- arteriolosclerosis
- glomerulosclerosis

4) CHF (pulm edema + Right HF)

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8
Q

complications of pulmonary HTN (RV)

A

Left heart failure
congenital heart disease (VSD)
cor pulmonale

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9
Q

causes of pulm HTN

A

1) left heart failure = VSD =
2) cor pulmonale
3) emphysema
4) pulm emboli;
5) morbid obesity

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10
Q

what happens to liver in right heart failure

A

NUTMEG LIVER = centrilobular congestion +/- necrosis

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11
Q

Developmental valve disease MAY NOT BE recognized in neonatal/child

A

1) hypoplastic valve
2) unicuspid aortic valve
3) bicuspid aortic valve

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12
Q

problem with congenital valve disease

A

1) decr outflow –> ventricular hypertrophy

2) incr tubrulence –> valve thicken + stenosis

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13
Q

toxic metabolic effects on cardiac valves

A

1) stenosis

2) regurg/insufficency

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14
Q

effects of stenosis and regurg on heart

A

myocardial hypertrophy/dilation proximal to abnormal valve

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15
Q

most common valves affected in degenerative syndromes

A

aortic

mitral valve

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16
Q

abnormal valves from degenerative syndrome show incr susceptibility to ____

A

1) nodular calcification + fibrosis
2) vegetation
3) infectiona

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17
Q

a

A

a

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18
Q

a

A

a

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19
Q

Names for valve changes

A

ballooning, tenting, myxomatous degeneration, hooding

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20
Q

what is most common cause of isolated mitral regurg

A

mitral valve prolapse

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21
Q

pathogenesis of mitral valve prolapse

A

1) defect in ECM metab
2) accumulate myxomatous ECM
3) balloon leaflet into LA during sysstole
4) elongation of chrodae

22
Q

problem in Marfan’s

A

fibrillin defect = elastic fiber

23
Q

effect of marfan’s on heart

A

1) mitral valve prolpase
2) aortic ring dilation because aorta more elastic
3) aneurysm of aorta –> dissection

24
Q

complications of mitral valve prolapse

A

ASYMPTOMATIC

regurg

endocarditis

25
Q

age group with calcific aortic stenosis

A

elderly –> senile calcific stenosis or degenerative aortic

26
Q

cause of calcific aortic stensosi

A

valve abnormality (LV outflow problem or LVH)

27
Q

clinical effects of calcific aortic stenosis

A

1) hypertrophied ventricle has incr load
2) if blood supply from heart decr, angina
3) if blood supply from system decr, syncope and dizziness

28
Q

define rheumatic fever

A

antibodies against M protein of group A strep cross react against body’s own glycoproteins

29
Q

diagnosis of rheumatic fever

A

JONES

1) joints = migratory polyarthritis
2) heart = pancaridtis
3) nodules
4) erythema marginatum
5) syndehnham chorea

30
Q

diagnosis of strep

A

postiive throat culture

or antibodies against streptolysin O

31
Q

what is pancarditis

A

10d - 6week after pharyngitis

32
Q

chronic effects of pancarditis

A

1) endocarditis = fibrosis –> vegetation on valves
2) myocarditis = Aschoff bodies
3) fibrinous pericaridtis –> fibrosis

33
Q

symptoms of pancaridtis

A

acute = arrhythmia, pericardial friction rub

chronic = mitral + aortic valve disease

34
Q

endocarditis define

A

inflammation of endocardium and valves –> fibrosis

35
Q

valves affected by endocarditis

A

1) mitral valve

2) aortic + mitral

36
Q

findings in rheumatic heart disease = endocarditis

A

1) valve leaflet and cusp = fibrosis, fusion, calcif

2) chordae tendinae = fibrosis, fusion

37
Q

complications of rheumatic heart disease –> endocaridtis

A

1) stenosis “fish mouth”
2) regurg

–> infective endocaridtis

38
Q

time line of rheumatic heart disease

A

1) group A strep
2) 2-6 weeks = acute rheum fever
3) years/decades = rheum heart disease

39
Q

in common among aortic stenosis/regurg and mitral stenosis/

A

all caused by rheumatic heart disease

40
Q

definition of vegetations

A

thrombus (clot) on valve

if sterile = no organism

41
Q

etiology of vegetation

A

Damaged valve from rheumatic heart disease
or Libman sachs endocarditis

Normal valve with Hypercoagulable state

42
Q

complications of vegetations

A

1) embolism
2) valve dysfunction
3) infection

43
Q

define infective endocarditis

A

primary infection of normal or damaged valve from bacteria

bacteria or non-bacteria

44
Q

sources of bacteria leading to infective endocariditis

A

skin/oral flora/GI tract

45
Q

in infective endocarditis normal valves are more common affected by ___

A

virulent organism (staph aureus)

46
Q

in infective endocarditis vulenrable valves are more common affected by ___

A

benign bacteria (strep viridans)

47
Q

bacteremic episodes of endocarditis caused by what

A

organism implant on valve/endocardial surface

dental/surgical/IVs
(mucosal injury in GI)
(skin injury

48
Q

bacteremic episodes of endocarditis cause what

A

acute endocarditis caused by highly virulent organisms A

49
Q

TYPES OF VALVES AFFECTED BY ACUTE ENDOCARDITIS

A

both normal and abnormal

50
Q

type of onset in subacute endocarditis

A

insidious (fever, weight loss)

51
Q

complications of subacute endocarditis

A

septic emboli to heart, skin, (Janeway), gut