Cardiology JC008: Inherited Cardiac Conditions Flashcards

1
Q

Types of Hereditary Cardiac Diseases

A
  1. Inherited Cardiomyopathies (CMP)
    - Hypertrophic (HCMP)
    - Dilated (DCMP)
    - Restricted (RCMP)
    - Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia (ARVD)
  2. Inherited Disorders of Rhythm and Conduction
    - Long QT syndrome (LQTS)
    - Brugada syndrome (BRS)
    - Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia (CPVT)
    - Progressive Cardiac Conduction Disorder (PCCD)
  3. Connective Tissue Diseases
    - Marfan
    - Ehlers-Danlos
    - Loeys-Dietz syndrome
    - Familial thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection
    - Bicuspid valve aortopathy
  4. Familial Hypercholesterolaemia

Congenital (abnormal differentiation, maybe genetic unrelated) =/= Inherited
- VSD, ASD, WPW (Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome)

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2
Q

Cardiomyopathies

A
  • Heterogeneous group of diseases of ***myocardium
  • Usually inappropriate Ventricular **Hypertrophy / **Dilatation —> ***Mechanical / Electrical dysfunction —> Heart failure, Syncope, Arrhythmia
  • Confined to heart / Part of generalised systemic disorders
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3
Q

***Classification of Cardiomyoapthies

A
  1. Hypertrophic
    - Inappropriate **LVH +/- **LVOTO
    —> can develop LV dilatation, Systolic dysfunction in late stage (i.e. Burnout HCMP)
    - ***Obstructive / Non-obstructive
  2. Dilated
    - LV dilation
    - ***Systolic dysfunction
  3. Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia (ARVD)
    - ***Fibro-adipose infiltrate —> Dilatation, Dysfunction, Arrhythmia of RV
    - LV involvement not uncommon
  4. Restrictive
    - Abnormal LV filling
    - ***Diastolic dysfunction
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4
Q

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCMP)

A
  • 1:500 - 1:1000 individuals
  • ***major cause of premature sudden cardiac death in young / apparently healthy athletes
  • Autosomal Dominant
  • Genetically heterogeneous disease (wide range of mutations in genes encoding ***sarcomeric proteins)
    —> variable penetrance (not everyone with mutation will develop disease in same way)
    —> variable clinical presentation (can be asymptomatic)
    —> variable prognosis

***3 types of hypertrophy:
1. Asymmetrical septal
2. Symmetrical
3. Apical

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5
Q

HCMP etiologies

A
  1. ***Sarcomeric protein gene mutation (40-60%)
  2. Others (5-10%)
    - **Inborn errors of metabolism (e.g. Glycogen storage diseases)
    - Malformation syndromes
    - **
    Amyloidosis
    - Neuromuscular diseases (e.g. ***Friedreich’s ataxia)
    - Drug-induced (Tacrolimus, Hydroxychloroquine, Steroids)
  3. Unknown (25-30%)
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6
Q

HCMP Clinical presentation

A

Variable
- Age of onset
- Degree / Location of hypertrophy

  1. ***Incidental ECG / ECHO findings
  2. ***Dyspnea on exertion (90%) (∵ Diastolic dysfunction —> ↑ LA pressure —> Fluid congestion in lungs)
  3. ***Angina (80%)
  4. Syncope (20%), Pre-syncope (50%)
    - ∵ **LVOT obstruction (worsens with ↑ contractility during exertion)
    - ∵ **
    Cardiac arrhythmia (AF, VT/VF)
  5. Sudden cardiac death
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7
Q

HCMP diagnosis

A

Presence of ↑ LV wall thickness + Not solely explained by abnormal loading condition

Adults: >=15 mm / >=13 mm (if +ve family history)
Children: > 2 SD above mean

***3 types of hypertrophy:
1. Asymmetrical septal
2. Symmetrical
3. Apical

**ECG findings:
1. **
LVH with strain pattern (Symmetrical / Asymmetrical HCMP)
2. Precordium **T wave inversion (Apical HCMP)
3. **
Low voltage (Amyloidosis: pathognomonic)
(4. ***Dagger Q waves in lateral + inferior leads (fast lane))

**Echo:
Obstructive HCMP:
- **
LVOTO: >=30 mmHg (>=50 mmHg require treatment)

Abnormal BP response during exercise:
- Fail to ↑ SBP >=20 mmHg
or
- ↓ >20 mmHg from peak pressure

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8
Q

Pathophysiology of Obstructive HCMP

A

4 interrelated processes:
1. LVOT obstruction (Asymmetrical septal hypertrophy + Systolic anterior motion of AMVL)
2. Diastolic dysfunction
3. Myocardial ischaemia
4. Mitral regurgitation

Overall effect: ↓ CO + Syncope

Much worse survival than without obstruction

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9
Q

Risk factors for Sudden Cardiac Death in HCMP

A
  1. ***Cardiac arrest (Ventricular fibrillation)
  2. Sustained ventricular tachycardia
  3. ***Unexplained syncope
  4. Non-sustained ventricular tachycardia
  5. ***Extreme LV thickness >= 30mm
  6. Abnormal exercise BP
  7. ***Family history of premature sudden cardiac death
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10
Q

***Treatment Algorithm for HCMP

A
  1. Exclude secondary causes
    - Amyloidosis
    - Metabolic diseases
    - Phaemochromocytoma
  2. Assess symptoms
    No Syncope
    —> LVOTO —> **β blockers, Disopyramide —> **Myotomy-myectomy / Septal alcohol ablation / Dual chamber pacing
    —> Non-obstructive —> ***β blockers, Ca blockers
  3. Assess complications / risks
    - History of sustained VT / VF / aborted SCD
    - High HCM Risk / SCD score
    —> ***ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) + Amiodarone
  • Atrial fibrillation —> ***Rate control (Amiodarone) + Anticoagulation + Direct current cardioversion
  • Progressive heart failure —> ***ACE inhibitor + Diuretic + β blockers —> Heart transplant
  1. Counselling / Genotyping / Family screening
    - patient information
    - insurance
    - employment
    - pregnancy
    - ***avoid competitive sports
    - recreational activities tailored to symptoms / SCD risk
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11
Q

HCM-Risk SCD

A

Variable:
- Age
- **Family history of SCD
- **
Unexplained syncope
- LVO gradient
- ***Maximum LV wall thickness
- Non-sustained VT
- LA diameter

**Score
- High risk: 5-year risk >=6% —> ICD for **
Primary prevention
- Low risk: 5-year risk <4% —> ICD not indicated
- Intermediate: 5-year risk 4-6% —> ICD may be considered

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12
Q

Restrictive Cardiomyopathy (RCMP)

A

Least common CMP

Hallmark:
- Normal systolic but **Abnormal diastolic function
- ∵ **
Rigid ventricular wall with impeded ventricular filling

Secondary form:
- Systemic diseases (endocardial involvement)
—> tropical endomyocardial fibrosis
—> endocardial fibroelastosis
—> eosinophilic endomyocardial disease
—> haemochromatosis
—> amyloidosis

Functionally ~ ***Constrictive pericarditis (normal systolic function but abnormal ventricular filling) —> CP can be surgically released

Symptoms:
- Arrhythmia
- Chest pain / Syncope (less likely than HCMP, ∵ less muscle mass / LVOTO than HCMP)

Prognosis:
- Variable
- Idiopathic form: No specific treatment —> Relentless symptomatic progression + High mortality

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13
Q

Dilated Cardiomyopathy (DCMP)

A
  • 60% of all CMP
  • Clinically heterogeneous

Etiologies:
- Viral infection
- Toxin exposure
- Infiltration
- **Valvular dysfunction
- **
Myocardial Ischaemia
- ***Idiopathic (35% (Positive family history in ~50% of patients))

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14
Q

Familial DCMP

A
  • Uncommon (2-8 per 100,000)
  • Spectrum of genetic disorders
  • Multiple genetic etiologies
    —> Autosomal Dominant (>90%)
    —> ***Laminopathies (most common) —> Heart block / AF
    —> X-linked recessive (e.g. Dystrophin)
    —> Mitochondrial DNA defects
  • Overlapping phenotypes

Challenges in diagnosis:
- Insufficient Family Hx
- Variable + Age-related penetrance
- Concomitant cardiac conditions

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15
Q

Pathogenesis of DCMP

A

Unknown

Genetic predisposition + Environmental trigger (e.g. Myocarditis by viral infection)
—> Dysregulated immune response
—> ***Myocardial damage
—> DCMP

DNA mutation
—> Altered gene products
—> ***Altered myocardial function
—> LV dilatation / failure
—> DCMP

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16
Q

Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia (ARVD)

A
  • Ventricular arrhythmia / SCD in young
  • Disease progression / onset related to exercise

Pathogenesis:
- Focal fibrofatty infiltration of RV (sometimes LV)
—> ***RV dyskinesia, dilatation, dysfunction

Etiologies:
- Autosomal dominant inheritance with variable penetrance / expressivity (1/3 familial)
—> 9 chromosomal loci identified
—> RyR2 gene, Desmoplakin, Plakoglobin
—> Naxos disease / ARVD loci on chromosome 17q: Palmar-plantar keratoderma, wooly hair, + ARVD

17
Q

ARVD Diagnosis

A

Criteria:
1. Imaging
- ***Echo / MRI / RV angiography —> imaging evidence of RV dyskinesia, dilatation, dysfunction

  1. ***ECG
    - Depolarisation / Repolarisation abnormalities
  2. Arrhythmia
    - ***VT of LBBB + Superior axis (major diagnostic criteria)
  3. Family history of confirmed ARVD
  4. ***Endomyocardial biopsy
    - fibrofatty infiltration of RV
    - in selected cases
18
Q

ARVD Management

A
  1. ***ICD
    - Cardiac arrest / Sustained VT/VF
    - LV impairment
    - NSVT / VT inducible (at electrophysiology study)
    - High risk mutations: Phospholamban, Lamin A/C, FLNC
  2. Treatment of HFrEF (Heart failure with reduced Ejection Fraction)
  3. Symptomatic ***RV dysfunction
    - ACE-1, ARB, BB, AA, Diuretics, Nitrates
  4. ***Arrhythmia management (AF / VT)
    - Rate / Rhythm control + Anticoagulants
  5. Exercise restriction
    - refrain from competitive / frequent high-intensity endurance exercise
19
Q

Primary disorders of Rhythm and Conduction

A
  1. Long QT syndrome
  2. Brugada syndrome
20
Q

Definition of QT prolongation

A

QT interval:
- beginning of QRS complex —> end of T wave
- QTc: corrected for HR > / < 60 bpm (by Bazett equation): ***0.44-0.45 secs
- Normal QTc: slightly prolonged in female (0.46 sec)

Criteria of Prolonged:
- Male: >0.45s
- Female: >0.46s
- Children: >0.46s

21
Q

Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia and TdP

A

PVT:
- multiple ventricular foci with the resultant QRS complexes varying in amplitude, axis and duration

TdP:
- specific form of PVT occurring in the context of QT prolongation

22
Q
  1. Long QT syndrome (LQTS)
A

Characterised by:
1. QT prolongation
2. Propensity to Ventricular tachyarrhythmias

Clinical presentation:
- Syncope
- Seizures
- SCD
- can remain Asymptomatic

Etiologies:
- Congenital: Ion channelopathy
—> Autosomal Dominant: Romano-Ward syndrome
—> Autosomal Recessive: Jervell syndrome, Lange-Nielson syndrome —> congenital deafness

  • Acquired: Drug-induced (may be genetically related), Bradycardia, Metabolic disorders, Malnutrition, Myocardial injuries, CNS disorders
    —> Pause-dependent TdP (onset of TdP is often preceded by a sequence of short-long-short R-R intervals, so called “pause dependent” TDP, with longer pauses associated with faster runs of TdP)
23
Q

Pathophysiology of Long QT syndrome

A
  1. QT interval (i.e. Ventricular repolarisation)
    —> determined by K efflux, Ca + Na influx
    —> if Channelopathy
    —> LQTS
  2. Prolonged repolarisation secondary to:
    —> **Reduced repolarisation current (Low K)
    —> **
    Enhanced depolarisation current (High Ca, Na)

Overall effect:
—> Functional substrate for **Transmural re-entry + **Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (Torsade de pointes TdP)

24
Q

Congenital LQTS

A

Type 1-3 (2/3 of all LQTS):

LQTS1:
- KCNQ1 loss of function (K channel)
- ***tall, broad T wave
- exercise-induced TdP (esp. swimming)

LQTS2:
- KCNH2 loss of function (K channel)
- ***notch T wave
- arousal-induced TdP

LQTS3:
- SCN5A gain of function (Na channel)
- ***late peaking of T wave
- SCD during sleep

25
Q

Medical conditions associated with LQTS / TdP

A

***Electrolyte imbalance:
- HypoK
- HypoCa
- HypoMg

Medical conditions:
- Arrhythmia: AV block, severe bradycardia, sick sinus syndrome
- Endocrine: DM, hyperparathyroidism, hypothyroidism, phaeochromocytoma
- Neurologic: CVA, trauma, subarachnoid haemorrhage, encephalitis
- Nutritional: acute weight loss, alcoholism, liquid protein diet, starvation, obesity

ALL need to be excluded in LQTS

26
Q

Drugs associated with LQTS, TdP

A
  1. ***Epinephrine
  2. Anti-anginal
  3. ***Anti-arrhythmic (Class 1A (Disopyramide), Class 3 (Sotalol))
  4. ***Antibiotics (erythromycin, co-trimoxazole, clarithromycin, moxifloxacin)
  5. ***Antihistamine (diphenhydramine)
  6. ***Antifungal (flucoconazole, ketoconazole)
  7. Diuretics (indapamide)
  8. GI (cisapride)
  9. Psychotropics (phenothiazine, amitriptyline, haloperidol, risperidone)
  10. Tacrolimus
  11. Chloral hydrate
  12. Muscle relaxant
27
Q

Discrimination of LQT and LQTS

A
  1. Clinical syndrome
    - symptoms
    - family history
    - other ECG findings
    - arrhythmia (presence of TdP)
  2. **Exercise testing
    - maladaptation of QT interval duration to the changing HR, with evident QTc prolongation at a **
    faster HR +/- VT
  3. **Genetic identification
    - known mutations in DNA samples
    - identification of LQTS gene mutation confirms diagnosis
    - **
    limited diagnostic value as +ve in 50%
28
Q

Diagnosis of LQTS

A

***Schwartz score

Definite: >=4
High probability: >=3.5
Intermediate: 1.5-3
Low: <=1

Criteria:
- **QTc
- HR
- T wave alternans
- T wave notching
- **
TdP
- **syncope
- congenital deafness
- **
family history

29
Q

Treatment of LQTS

A
  1. Lifestyle advices
    - avoid strenuous / competitive exercise
    - avoid QT prolonging drugs
  2. ***β-blockers
    - all patients unless CI
  3. ***Left cervicothoracic stellectomy (remove Stellate ganglion)
    - anti-adrenergic measure in high-risk patients with LQTS
    - recurrence of cardiac events despite β-blocker
  4. ***ICD
    - symptoms despite β-blockers
    - most effective for high-risk patients
    - deliver shock during TdP
  5. ***Cardiac pacemakers
    - Eliminate Arrhythmogenic bradycardia
    - ↓ HR irregularities (eliminate short-long-short series)
    - ↓ Repolarisation heterogeneity
    —> ↓ risk of TdP ventricular tachycardia

Some high risk patients:
- β-blockers + Stellectomy + Cardioverter-defibrillator with Cardiac pacing function

30
Q

Prognosis of LQTS

A
  • Good with β-blockers
  • Very good after ICD
  • TdP episodes are usually self-terminating
  • 4-5% fatal
31
Q
  1. Brugada syndrome
A

Pathophysiology:
- SCN5A loss of function —> ***↓ inward Na current —> abnormal electrophysiologic activity in RV

  • Mean age: Mid-late 30
  • M:F = 10:1
  • Autosomal dominant with variable penetrance
  • Periodic normalisation of ECG
  • ***Na blockers used to unmask syndrome
  • ***Malignant tachyarrhythmia at rest / night
  • SCD due to VF: first event in some patients, high recurrence rate
  • ***LQT/Brugada overlap syndrome
  • possible overlap with ***ARVD suggested

Characterised by:
1. **ST elevation in right-sided precordial leads
2. **
Conduction block at RV
3. Structurally normal heart
4. Propensity for life-threatening ***polymorphic ventricular tachyarrhythmia

Epidemiology:
- Asia: Type 1, 2

32
Q

Type 1, 2, 3 Brugada ECG

A

Type 1 (**Coved-type ST elevation):
- only diagnostic ECG in Brugada syndrome
- J-wave / ST elevation of >=2mm / 0.2 mV at its peak
- **
Negative T wave with little / no isoelectric separation

Type 2 (**Saddle-back-type ST elevation):
- J-wave >=2mm
- gradually descending ST elevation (remaining >=1mm above baseline)
- **
Positive / Biphasic T wave —> saddle-back

Type 3:
- Right precordial ST elevation (Saddle-back type / Coved type) without meeting aforementioned criteria

33
Q

Diagnosis of Brugada syndrome

A
  1. Type 1 Brugada ECG pattern
  2. Other Brugada ECG pattern
    - Type 2-3
  3. Latent / Intermittent Brugada
    - Repeat ECG periodically
    - Repeat ECG at 2nd / 3rd ICS
    - ***administration of Na blockers: Ajmaline, Procainamide, Flecainide
  4. Exclude ECG mimicking Type 1 Brugada syndrome (i.e. Brugada ECG phenocopy)
    - **MI
    - **
    PE
    - Myocardial / Pericardial diseases
    - Metabolic disorders
    - ***Mechanical compression of RVOT
    —> Brugada ECG pattern should resolve if above resolved
    —> Evidence supporting phenocopy: Absence of symptoms, Absence of family history, Negative Na channeling test
34
Q

Treatment of Brugada syndrome

A

Difficult (∵ lack of good stratification)

  1. ICD
    - for symptomatic (e.g. syncope, seizure, nocturnal agonal respiration)
  2. Follow-up for symptoms / ICD
    - for asymptomatic patients with spontaneous abnormal (type 1) ECG + inducible PVT
  3. Follow-up (very low event rate)
    - avoid Brugada-aggravating drugs
    - treat fever early
    - avoid excess alcohol
    - avoid cocaine
35
Q

Familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH)

A
  • Autosomal Dominant
  • ***Elevated LDL
  • Heterozygous: 1 in 200-500
  • Mutations of ***LDL-R, ApoB, PCSK9, LDL-RAP
  • ↑ risk of premature atherosclerotic coronary heart disease

Current treatments:
1. Statins
- ↓ Cholesterol synthesis
- ↑ SREBP-2 activity —> ↑ synthesis of LDL-R in liver
(but SREBP-2 also ↑ PCSK9 secretion)

  1. Ezetimibe
  2. Bile acid sequestrants
  3. Niacin
    —> many still fail to achieve LDL target

Newer treatment:
5. PCSK9 inhibitor (Human mAb against PCSK9)
- ***Alirocumab
- PCSK9: enzyme mediating degradation of LDL-R
- significant no. of patient have gain-of-function mutation of PCSK9 —> Statin not effective

36
Q

Diagnosis of FH

A
  1. Dutch lipid clinic criteria (not used in children)
    - Family history
    - Clinical history
    - Physical examination
    - Cholesterol level
    - DNA analysis
  2. LDL-C level **>8 mmol/L —> FH for sure
    - **
    >=6.5 —> highly probable
  3. Tendon xanthomata
  4. ***Genetic testing
    - useful for family screening
37
Q

Management of FH

A
  1. Lifestyle modification (Mandatory)
    - minimise CVS risk
  2. Lipid-lowering drugs
    - target LDL-C (Adults: ***<2.5 mmol / L, Children: <3.5 mmol/L)