Cardiology Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the clinical features of MS

A
Tapping apex beat
Loud first heart sound
Opening snap early diastole
mid diastolic rumbling murmur at the apex, heard best in expiration, left lateral position
AF
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2
Q

What are the clinical markers of severe MS?

A
early opening snap
increasing length of murmur
signs of pulmonary HTN
signs of pulmonary congestion
Graham-Steel murmur (PR)
Low pulse pressure
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3
Q

What is a Graham Steele murmur?

A

early diastolic murmur in the pulmonary area radiating down the LSE, louder in inspiration
= Pulmonary regurg, signifies elevated pulmonary artery pressures

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4
Q

What are the clinical signs of pulmonary HTN?

A
raised venous pressure: systolic V waves
parasternal heave
loud, palpable P2
PR
TR: PSM LLSE, louder in insp
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5
Q

What conditions give a mid diastolic rumbling murmur?

A
MS
TS
Severe MR
Left atrial mass (myxoma)
L) atrial thrombus
Cor triatrium
Austin flint murmur of AR
Carey Coombs murmur of acute rheumatic fever
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6
Q

What are management options for MS?

A

Perc ballon Mitral valvotomy - usually younger patients, better rheumatic valve disease
Valve replacement - usually older as concomitant MR
Can use mitral valve split score to help determine choice. < 9 considered favourable for valvotomy

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7
Q

What are the CIs to mitral valvuloplasty?

A
L) atrial thrombus
> mild MR
MV area > 1.5cm
Severe or bicommissural calcification
Absence of commissural fusion
Severe concomitant AV disease or severe combined TS and TR
Concomitant CAD requiring bypass
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8
Q

What the chronic causes of mitral regurgitation?

A
Degenerative disease
Mitral valve prolapse (e.g. Marfan's)
Rheumatic - rarely MR alone
Papillary muscle dysfunction (could be due to LVF, ischaemia)
Connective tissue disease (RA/ank spend)
Congenital
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9
Q

What are the acute causes of MR?

A

IE (perforation of anterior leaflet), rupture of a myxomatous cord
MI (chordae rupture or papillary muscle dysfunction)
Surgery
Trauma

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10
Q

What are the clinical features of MR?

A

Pansystolic murmur - an early short murmur in acute and a late murmur in MV prolapse
Widely split S2
3rd heart sound, LVF, pulmonary HTN, narrow pulse pressure all markers of severity

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11
Q

Indicators for surgery in MR?

A
Symptoms
If asymptomatic: 
- if AF/Pulm HTN
- EF 30-60% and/or LVESD > 40mm
- If EF <30%, high risk but can be considered
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12
Q

What are the causes of aortic stenosis?

A

1) degenerative
2) bicuspid valve
3) rheumatic valve disease
4) congenital
5) infective endocarditis

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13
Q

What is the differential diagnosis of an ESM louder in expiration?

A

AS
HOCM
Supravalvular aortic stenosis

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14
Q

What are the criteria for severe AS?

A

Valve area <1cm, gradient > 40mmhg, mean velocity > 4m/s

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15
Q

When would you refer for AS surgery?

A

Symptomatic or asymp and one of:

  • LV systolic dysfunction
  • Signs of pulmonary HTN
  • abnormal blood pressure response on exercising
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16
Q

What are surgical options available for AS?

A

Balloon valvuloplasty for short term symptomatic relief
Valve replacement if fit enough
TAVI for intermediate/high risk surgical candidates

17
Q

What are the clinical signs of severe AS?

A
Slow rising pulse
Narrow pulse pressure
Low volume pulse
Systolic thrill 
Heaving apex 
Reversed splitting of the 2nd HS
Soft S2
4th HS (forceful atrial contraction against a poorly compliant left ventricle)
Signs of pulmonary HTN or cardiac failure
18
Q

What is aortic sclerosis

A

?Mild thickening and/or calcification of a trileaflet aortic valve without outflow obstruction

19
Q

What is the differential for a PSM?

A

MR, TR, VSD, aortopulmonary shunts

20
Q

What is the differential for a late systolic murmur?

A

Mitral valve prolapse

Papillary muscle dysfunction

21
Q

What is the differential for an early systolic murmur?

A

Acute severe MR

22
Q

What are the causes of mitral stenosis?

A

Rheumatic
Severe mitral annular calcification
After mitral valve repair for mitral regurgitation
Congenital

23
Q

What are the indications for surgery for MS?

A

Symptoms with valve area of less than 1cm or signs of increasing r)heart pressure

24
Q

What are the clinical signs of severity of MR?

A
Enlarged L)ventricle - displaced apex beat
Pulmonary HTN
3rd HS
Early diastolic rumble
Soft 1st HS
Small volume pulse
L) ventricular failure
25
Q

What are the indications for surgery for MR?

A

Class 3 or 4 symptoms
AF or pulm HTN
If EF 30-60% and/or LVESD > 40mm consider intervention
If EF <30%, can be considered but high risk

26
Q

What are the clinical signs of mitral valve prolapse?

A

Late systolic click murmur

  • valsalva makes the murmur longer and click earlier
  • hand grip which increases after load makes it shorter
27
Q

Which conditions are associated with mitral valve prolapse?

A

Marfan’s syndrome
ASD
PCKD

28
Q

What are the complications of mitral valve prolapse?

A

MR

IE

29
Q

What are the causes of chronic aortic regurgitation?

A
Valvular cause:
-rheumatic
- congenital
- seronegative arthropathy, esp ank spond
Aortic root:
- marfan’s
- Aortitis (seronegative arthropathies, RA, tertiary syphilis
- dissecting aneurysm 
- old age
30
Q

What are the causes of acute AR?

A

Valvular - IE

Aortic root - marfan’s, HTN, dissecting aneurysm

31
Q

What are the clinical signs of severity of AR?

A
Collapsing pulse
Wide pulse pressure
Length if the decrescendo diastolic murmur
3rd HS
Soft A2
Austin flint murmur
L) ventricular failure
32
Q

What are the indications for surgery for AR?

A

Symptoms
Or LV dysfunction
Pulmonary HTN