29.1 Cardiolgy Part II Flashcards

1
Q

What is eisenmenger syndrome?

A
VSD, pulmonary artery receives a lot of blood
Leads to left ventricular hypertrophy 
Fluid overload
Stiffens arteries causing increased BP
RV hypertrophies
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2
Q

What does eisenmernger syndrome lead to

A

Leads to…..

Need heart and lung transplant to cure

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3
Q

How do you close VSD’s

A

Put catheter up femoral, into right atrium and patch up defect

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4
Q

Discuss atrial septal defects?

A

Few clinical signs, good chance of spontatnous closure

Sometimes detected in adulthood with a fib, HF or pulmonary hypertension

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5
Q

What is a trio-ventriculo septal defects associated with?

A

Trisomy 21

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6
Q

How does atrioventricular septal defects affect the valves?

A

Mitral and tricuspid valves are fused

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7
Q

Discuss pulmonary stenosis?

A

The most common heart murmur in children
Typically asymptomatic
In severe there is exertion all dyspnoea and fatigue
Ejection subtopic murmur round in the left sternal border radiating to back

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8
Q

What is a ejection systolic murmur?

A

Murmur that occurs in the systole and is there is a crescendo then descrescendo

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9
Q

What is the worry with pulmonary stenosis?

A

The valve will not grow when the heart grows. This can cause a more severe stenosis. Therefore children with pulmonary stenosis is followed up

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10
Q

How do you treat pulmonary stenosis

A

Balloon valvoplasty, up through the femoral vein into the right ventricle

Increases pulmonary circulation

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11
Q

How does aprtic stenosis present?

A

Mostly asymptomatic, if severe reduced exercise tolerance, exertional chest pain, syncope
Ejection systolic murmur, upper right sternal border. Radiation into carotids

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12
Q

How do you treat aprtic stenosis

A

Balloon aortic valvoplasty through the femoral artery

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13
Q

Discuss foetal circulation

A

Placenta—> umbilical vein—> vena cava—> right atrium—> foramen ovale—> left ventricle—> aorta —> umbilical artery

Or

Placenta, umbilical vein, vena cava right atrium—> right ventricle —> pulmonary trunk—> ductus arteriosus—> aorta

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14
Q

What are the changes in fetal circulation at birth (common exam question!)

A
Pulmonary vascular resistance falls
Pulmonary blood flow rises
Systemic vascular resistance is increased
Ductus arteriousus closes
Ductus venous closes
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15
Q

What is meant by a patent ductus arteriosus?

A

Very common in preterm infants, patent ductus arteriosus

Treated with fluid restriction (diuretics) and prostaglandin inhibitors. IV ibuprofen also used to conservatively close problem

Can also do surgical ligation

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16
Q

What is coarctation of the aorta

A

A kink in the aortic wall

17
Q

How do coarctation of the aorta present?

A

Cardiac shock

Feel for femoral pulses and they’re gone

18
Q

How do you treat coarctation of the aorta?

A

Stabilise the baby by opening duct with prostataglandin E1 or E2

Ship to cardiothoracic centre (Glasgow)

Resection of end to end anastomoses

Subclavian patch repair

Balloon aortoplasty

19
Q

What is transposition of the great arteries?

A

Aorta comes of the right ventricle
The pulmonary artery comes off the left ventricle
Need a shunt or VSD to survive

20
Q

How do you treat a transposition of the great arteries?

A

Immediately inset venous catheter and give prostaglandins to kept any ducts open

Do arterial septostomy- rib the atrial septum to allow mixing of blood

After time do the switch procedure (put great arteries back)

21
Q

What is fallot’s tetralogy?

A

Right ventricular outflow obstruction (pulmonary artery stenosis)
Right ventricular hypertrophy
Large vestrosepticular defect
Overriding aorta

22
Q

What gives the highest indicator of poor prognosis of fallots tetralogy

A

Right pulmonary outflow obstruction

If large then causes large hypertrophy leading to more pressure and more oxygenated blood in the aorta