Aortic Incompetence Flashcards

1
Q

Aortic Incompetence presentation

A

This patient has been referred by his GP with ‘a new murmur’. He is asymptomatic. Please examine his cardiovascular system and diagnose his problem.

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2
Q

Clinical signs of Aortic Incompetence

A
  1. Collapsing pulse (water-hammer pulse) reflecting a wide pulse pressure, e.g. 180/45
  2. Apex beat is hyperkinetic and displaced laterally (TV: thrusting volume‐loaded)
  3. Thrill in the aortic area
  4. Auscultation:
    - Early diastolic murmur (EDM) loudest at the lower left sternal edge with the patient sat forward in expiration.
    - There may be an aortic flow murmur and a mid diastolic murmur (MDM) (Austin–Flint) due to regurgitant flow impeding mitral opening.
    - In severe AR there may be ‘free flow’ regurgitation and the EDM may be silent.
  5. Signs of severity:
    - Collapsing pulse,
    - Third heart sound (S3) and
    - Pulmonary oedema
  6. Eponymous signs
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3
Q

Auscultation in Aortic Incompetence

A
  • Early diastolic murmur (EDM) loudest at the lower left sternal edge with the patient sat forward in expiration.
  • There may be an aortic flow murmur and a mid diastolic murmur (MDM) (Austin–Flint) due to regurgitant flow impeding mitral opening.
  • In severe AR there may be ‘free flow’ regurgitation and the EDM may be silent.
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4
Q

Eponymous signs in Aortic Incompetence

A

1. Corrigan’s: visible vigorous neck pulsation
2. Quincke’s: nail bed capillary pulsation
3. De Musset’s: head nodding
4. Duroziez’s: diastolic murmur proximal to femoral artery compression
5. Traube’s: ‘pistol shot’ sound over the femoral arteries

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5
Q

Congenital Causes of Aortic Incompetence

A
  1. Bicuspid aortic valve;
  2. Perimembranous VSD
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6
Q

Acquired Causes of Aortic Incompetence

A

Valve leaflet:
(Acute): Endocarditis,
(Chronic): 1- Rheumatic fever or 2- Drugs: pergolide, slimming agents

Aortic root
(Acute): 1- Dissection (type A) or 2- Trauma
(Chronic):
1- Dilatation: Marfan’s and hypertension
2- Aortitis: syphilis, ankylosing spondylitis and vasculitis

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7
Q

Other causes of a collapsing pulse

A

1. Pregnancy
2. Patent ductus arteriosus
3. Paget’s disease
4. Anaemia
5. Thyrotoxicosis

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8
Q

Investigation in Aortic Incompetence

A

1. ECG: lateral T‐wave inversion
2. CXR: cardiomegaly, widened mediastinum and pulmonary oedema
3. TTE/TOE:
- Severity: LVEF and dimensions, root size, jet width
- Cause: intimal dissection flap or vegetation
4. Cardiac catheterization: grade severity aortogram and check coronary patency

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9
Q

Medical Management of Aortic Incompetence

A
  • ACE inhibitors and ARBs (reducing afterload)
  • Regular review: symptoms and echo: LVEF, LV size and degree of AR
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10
Q

Indications for Surgery in Aortic Incompetence

A

Acute:
a. Dissection
b. Aortic root abscess/endocarditis (homograft preferably)
Chronic: Replace the aortic valve when:
a. Symptomatic: dyspnoea and reduced exercise tolerance (NYHA > II) AND/OR
b. The following criteria are met:
1. wide pulse pressure >100 mm Hg
2. ECG changes (on Exercise Tolerance Test)
3. Echo: LV enlargement >5.5 cm systolic diameter or EF <50% Ideally replace the valve prior to significant LV dilatation and dysfunction.

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11
Q

Prognosis of Aortic Incompetence

A
  • Asymptomatic with EF > 50% – 1% mortality at 5 years.
  • Symptomatic and all three criteria present − 65% mortality at 3 years
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12
Q

Guideline recommendations for AVR for asymptomatic Pt with Marfan syndrome

A
  1. Aortic root aneurysm diameter 50 mm or more
  2. Aortic root aneurysm 45 mm or more and
    - A family hx of aortic dissection
    - Rapid aneurysm expansion (>3 mm per year)
    - Extreme aortic or mitral valve regurgitation
    - Pregnancy plans
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