Cardiovascular strand: Lecture 11 - Cardic haemodynamics/ heart failure Flashcards

1
Q

How do you calculate cardiac reserve?

A

Cardiac reserve = maximal cardiac output - cardiac output at rest

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2
Q

What is preload?

A

The level of stretch that a cardiomyocyte is exposed to before ventricular ejection - measured best by LV end diastolic volume

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3
Q

What is afterload?

A

Afterload is the pressure the heart must work against to eject blood during systole (ventricular contraction)

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4
Q

Why is reduced CO dangerous?

A

reduced organ perfusion

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5
Q

What is the baroreceptor reflex to reduce heart rate, stroke volume and cause vasodilation?

A
  • via autonomic nervous system
  • arterial stretch sensed
  • afferent loop ends in nucleus tractus solitarius and rostral ventrolateral medulla
  • reduces sympathetic tone
  • augments vagal tone (increases activity of vagus nerve) which reduces HR (beta), reduces SV (beta) and causes vasodilation (alpha)
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6
Q

What is the juxtaglomerular apparatus?

A
  • renal perfusion pressure sensed at glomerulus
  • sodium concentration sensed in fluid surrounding distal convoluted tubule
  • if either redcued, renin is released
  • main function is to regulate blood ressure and the filtration rate of the glomerulus
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7
Q

What is diastolic dysfunction?

A
  • heart dosen’t fill proeprly therefore dosen’t eject properly due to the frank-starling mechanism
  • known as heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFPEF)
  • stiffened ventricle that dosen’t fill properly
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8
Q

What is left ventricular systolic dysfunction?

A
  • heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFREF)
  • damaged ventricle that can’t pump properly
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9
Q

Whats the relationship between years and mortality for reduced and preserved ejection fraction?

A

No treatment for patients wit HFPEF but not HFREF

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10
Q

What are 3 symptoms of heart failure?

A
  • oedema
  • breathlessness (dyspnoea) e.g during exercise, lying flat (orthopnoea), during night (paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea)
  • fatigue
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11
Q

How do these “left sided” symptoms of heart failure occur?

A
  • back pressure in LV causes raised pressure in pulmonary circulation
  • increased hydrostatic pressure forces fluid outside vascular compartment
  • interstitial space in lungs fills with fluid
  • oxygen sats drop
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12
Q

What are “right sided” symptoms (when they effect the right ventricle) and how do they occur?

A
  • back pressure transmits to venae cavae
  • internal jugular venous pressure rises
  • jugular venous pressure raised
  • gravity and raised orthostatic pressures force fluid from vascular compartment to peripheral tissue
  • ankles swell
  • hepatomegaly (swelling of liver)
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13
Q

What are the causes of heart failure?

A
  1. Heart attack
  2. Atrial fibrillation
  3. Hypertension
  4. Myocarditis - viruses
  5. Alcohol (EDOH)
  6. Genetic factors
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14
Q

If soeone has a heart attack, how can you stop heart failure?

A

Insert balloon and stent before myocardium dies to open blood vessels - within 2 hours

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15
Q

Where on the heart would anterolateral infarction and posteroinferior infarction occur?

A
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16
Q

What happens when ejection fraction drops?

A
  1. Reduced CO
  2. Reduced systolic BP
  3. Reduced aterial stretch
  4. Reduced renal perfusion
17
Q

What happens when HR goes too high?

A
  • end of Frank-sterling curve and bowditch effect
  • LV stretch eventually exceeds physiological levels - decompensation
  • move to the descending limb of the sarcomere tension curve
  • small rises in LVEDP (fluid retention) causes large drops in sarcomere tension e.g contractility and SV
  • reduces CO, impact on RAAS and ANS
18
Q

What is adverse remodelling?

A
  • thinning and stretching and LV cavity size increases
  • aneurysmal left ventricle because of scar
  • rare nowadays
  • opposite of Laplace’s law
19
Q

How do we calculate LVEF% and when do we calculate it?

A

LVEF%= stroke volume / end diastolic volume

this is a key value calculated on an echo

20
Q

How do we treat a patient with heart failure?

A
  • giving oxygen
  • optimise alveolar ventilation
  • may need to increase pressure in airways to oxygenate blood
  • non-invasive or invasive ventilation
  • relax pulmonary vessels to reduce preload and take strain off LV
  • gve morphinr to help breathing and pain
  • furosemide (diuretic) to get rid of fluid in chest
21
Q

What do diuretics do?

A

they limit reabsorption of fluid

  • offloads the ventricles
  • moves back along starling curve
  • can maximise LV contractility
22
Q

What are the side effects of diuretics?

A
  • renal dysfunction
  • reduces Na, K, Mg
  • can induce diabetes (thiazides)
23
Q

Which drugs are available for prognostic development for heart failure? (make them live longer and better lives)

A

-ACEi and A2RBs e.g ramipril, candesartan - prevents overactive RAAS

24
Q

What do ACEi drugs do?

A

Block conversion of AgI to AGII

  • reduces effect of AgI on vasculature
  • diminishes release of aldosterone
  • can cause bradykinin accumulation - cough
25
Q

How can we reduce sympathetic activity and reduce renin secretion?

A

give beta blockers e.g bisoprolol to allow LV more relavation time so better filling

26
Q

Wahtare the cautions of beta blockers?

A

asthma, low HR, heart blocks

27
Q

Give other heart rate modifiers and where do they act?

A
  1. Ivarbradine - SA node
  2. Digoxin - AV for atrial fibrillation
  3. Sacubitril (neprilysin inhibitor -promotes sodium and water excretion) and valsartan (ARB)
28
Q

What device therapy exists for heart failure?

A

Pacemaker

  1. ICD - implantable cardioverter defibrillator

gives heart shock when they have a rhymth problem

  1. Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) - when left and heart side of the heart aren’t synchronised, pacemaker is put into coronary sinus to put it back into sychrony
29
Q
A