Cardiovascular Risk Factors and complications Flashcards

1
Q

What are the major risk factors for coronary artery disease?

A

smoking/tobacco use

poor diet

high blood cholesterol

high blood pressure

insufficient physical activity

overweight/obesity

diabetes

psychosocial stress (linked to people’s ability to influence the potentially stressful environments in which they live)

excess alcohol consumption

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2
Q

Risk factors for ventricular fibrillation?

A

Irritable ventricular cells (hyper/hypo -kalemia/calcemia/natremia)

Myocardial scarring (Previous MI)

Cardiomyopathy (History of CAD or genetic disorder of heart)

Ventricular tachycardia

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3
Q

Supraventricular tachycardia risk factors?

A
CAD
HF
COPD
PE
Smoking
Alcoholism 
Hyperthyroidism 
Digitalis
Inherited cardiac conditions
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4
Q

Atrial fibrillation risk factors?

A
Increasing age
Atrial disease
Cardiac inflammation 
Valvular disease (aortic/mitral stenosis/regurgitation)
HF
HTN
Hormonal abnormalities 
Alcoholism
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5
Q

What are common complications of an MI?

A

Overall = reduced contractility, electrical instability and tissue necrosis

Brady/Tachy-arrhythmias: Ventricular fibrillation,ventricular tachycardia, supraventricular tachycardia (ionic imbalances and disruption to conduction)

Cardiac arrest

Cardiogenic shock (heart can’t meet body’s demands)

Left/right ventricular failure (structural integrity undermined)

Pericarditis (inflammatory reaction to necrosis)

Systemic embolism (stasis of blood)

Cardiac tamponade (Rip occurs due to necrosis)

Mitral regurgitation (valve/papillary muscles/chordae tendineae damaged)

Ventricular septal defect (septum damaged, causing mixing of blood in the ventricles, causing hypoxaemia and pulmonary HTN)

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6
Q

What are the complications of hypertension?

A
Nephropathy (chronic kidney disease)
Stroke (+2mmhg = +10% risk)
Heart failure 
Cognitive decline
Retinopathy
Cerebrovascular disease
Ischemic heart disease (+2mmhg = +7% risk)
Death

Urgencies:
Left ventricular failure

Aortic dissection

Hypertensive encephalopathy

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7
Q

What are the risk factors for (both acute and chronic) heart failure?

(Think of each part of the body, including the blood)

A

Increasing age

History of congestive HF

History of valvular disease

History of arrhythmias

HTN

Pericardial disease

Current valvular disease

Arrhythmias

DM T1/2

Pregnancy

Alcohol excess

Anaemia

Hypothyroidism and Thyrotoxicosis

MI

Dyslipidaemia

Pulmonary embolism

Infection

Family history of HOCM

Dilated cardiomyopathy or HOCM

Anaemia

Drugs: Steroids, cocaine and NSAIDS

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8
Q

What are the complications of heart failure? (Both acute and chronic)

A

Arrhythmias: VT, VF, AF

Hypotension - due to diuretics

Chronic renal insufficiency- poor perfusion

VTE/Stroke

Anaemia

Acute renal failure

Hepatic dysfunction - due to congestion

Pulmonary oedema

Pleural effusion

Death - decompensated HF has 30-50% 1 year mortality

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9
Q

What are the risk factors for infective endocarditis?

  • think of ways that infection can be delivered to the heart, it’s not especially easy
A

IVDU

Prior hx of IE

Heart valve replacement

Congenital heart disease: bicuspid aortic valve

Heart transplant

Presence of in-dwelling catheters (haemodialysis etc)

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

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10
Q

What are the complications of infective endocarditis?

A

Chronic heart failure

Acute heart failure

Systemic emboli: stroke, DVT

Valvular dehiscence (wound rupture along a surgical incision)

Valvular rupture or fistula

Mycotic aneurysm (infected aneurysm)

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11
Q

Which arteries are attached to the coeliac artery and immediately at risk if the coeliac is impaired during an AAA?

A

Left gastric artery

Splenic artery

Common hepatic artery

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12
Q

What are the risk factors for peripheral vascular disease?

A

Increasing age (a natural process)

Male

Family history of PVD

Smoking

HTN

High cholesterol

DM T1/2

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13
Q

What are the risk factors for abdominal aortic aneurysms?

A

Male

Over 60 (1 in 25 over 65’s have an AAA)

Hypertension and smoking together

Family history of AAA

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14
Q

What are the risk factors for abdominal aortic dissection?

A

Male

Age 60 or more

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