Mitral Regurgitation Flashcards

1
Q

Causes:

What are the main 2 causes?

How may an MI cause this?

What throat infection could cause valve disease?

All valve disease could also be caused by congenital weakness or abnormalities!

A

Mitral valve prolapse - causes 50%
Calcification

Papillary muscle rupture due to MI

Rheumatic heart disease

Rheumatic heart disease is a condition in which the heart valves have been permanently damaged by rheumatic fever. The heart valve damage may start shortly after untreated or under-treated streptococcal infection such as strep throat or scarlet fever.

What is the difference between rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease?

RF is an inflammatory disorder caused by a Group A strep throat infection.
It affects the connective tissue of the body, causing temporary, painful arthritis and other symptoms.
In some cases rheumatic fever causes long-term damage to the heart and its valves. This is called rheumatic heart disease.

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2
Q

Causes:

How does LV dilation and dilated cardiomyopathy both cause regurg?

A

Functional mitral regurgitation occurs when the left atrium or left ventricle dilates, causing the mitral valve annulus to also dilate, and thus preventing the mitral valve leaflets from coapting properly.

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3
Q

Mitral valve prolapse:

What is it?

A

Myxamatous degeneration of valve in which thickened valve leaflet is displaced into the left atrium during systole

It is a connective tissue disorder so patient may have other connective tissue disorders such as Marfan’s

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4
Q

S+S:

The classic triad of symptoms - mnemonic SAD

They also have some symptoms of AF. What are they?

A

Syncope - severe
Angina
Dyspnoea

Symptoms of AF - palpitations and an irregularly irregular HR

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5
Q

Signs:

  • What type of murmur do you hear and where?
  • Where does it radiate to?
  • What else could you have at the apex?
  • Where and when can you feel a thrill?
  • What does S1 sound like?

What can cause acute mitral regurgitation with pulmonary oedema? - 2

  • Where would you listen into for radiation?
  • Do you use the diaphragm or the bell?
A

Pansystolic at apex
Radiates to axilla

Hyperdynamic apex beat

Systolic thrill over apex

Soft S1

Infective endocarditis
Papillary muscle rupture - MI

Into the axilla using the diaphragm

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6
Q

Ddx for pan systolic murmur:

Mitral regurg causes a pan-systolic murmur. What other valve can cause this? - think about the other side of the heart!

A

Tricuspid regurgitation - louder on inspiration

VSD - in young patients and apex displaced

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7
Q

Investigations:

What is diagnostic?

What could you find on ECG?

What could you see on CXR?

What further tests are available?

A

Echo

AF
P-mitrale if no sinus rhythm
LVH

Enlarged left ventricle and atrium - double right heart border
Valve calcification

Cardiac MRI
Angiography
Catherterisation
BNP

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8
Q

Management:

Medical:

  • How often is it monitored?
  • When is an annual echo needed?
A

Every 6 months

In severe disease

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9
Q

Management:

Surgical:

  • What surgery for coronary artery disease can be done alongside mitral valve repair?
  • What surgical options are there? - 3
A

CABG

Open repair
Valve replacements
Percutaneous repair

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10
Q

Complications

A
Structural changes - LV and LA enlargement 
CHF 
Pulmonary HTN 
AF
Infective endocarditis
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