Cardio things Flashcards
(18 cards)
Angina treatments order
- BB (atenolol)
- Ca2+ (verapamil)
- long acting nitrate
- Ranolazine
- Nicorandil, Ivrabradine
+ GTN + Statin + ACE
Stage 1 hypertension
Clinic: 140/90 mmHg
Home: 135/85 mmHg
Stage 2 hypertension
Clinic: 160/100 mmHg
Home: 150/95 mmHg
Stage 3 hypertension
Clinic: 180mmHg systolic or 110mmHg diastolic
Targets for hypertension
below 140/90 if under 80, below 150/90 if over 80
post MI
ACEi
A
Betablocker
Statin
Angina treatment
if under 55 and caucasian:
- ACEi - lisinopril, ramipril
- add Ca2+ blocker - verapamil, diltiazem
- add Diuretic (thiazide) - bendrofluazide
- add alpha blocker (prazosin), beta blocker (atenolol), more diuretic
if over 55/afro-caribbean
- Ca2+ blocker
- add ACEi
- add Diuretic
- add alpha blocker, beta blocker, more diuretic
- change ACE for ARB (losartan) if suffering from dry cough
SVT
- vagal manouvre
- IV Adenosine
- IV Verapamil
- Radiofrequency ablation
Sinus tachycardia
Betablocker after treating underlying cause
Chronic HF
LVF -
- ACE or ARB
- add ARB
- Digoxin
- ICD
Preserved ejection -
1. Furosemide (loop diuretic)
Acute HF
Sit up, O2, IV Furosemide, IV Diamorphine
Torsades de Pointes
Magnesium sulphate then ventricular pacing
1st Degree AV block
long PR but normal P waves
common in athletes and young people
no treatment needed
2nd Degree AV block - mobitz type 1
- P waves are irregular
- R waves are irregular
- PR intervals are irregular; they have cyclic lengthening until a QRS is dropped
need ventricular pacing
3rd Degree AV block
Atrium and ventricles no longer working together, they are completely independent
P waves have no relation to the QRS
need permanent pacemaker/ventricular pacing
2nd Degree AV block - mobitz type 2
- P waves are regular
- but QRS (R waves) irregular
- some P waves followed by QRS, some not
need ventricular pacing
S3
blood will be turbulent and hit off the EDV producing a sound as the blood enters the ventricle
Present in mitral regurg, dilated cardiomyopathy, constrictive pericarditis ‘pericardial knock’ - anything that causes left V failure. Can be normal sometimes in people under 30
S4
late diastole when atria is squeezing the last bit of blood into the ventricle, this causes ventricular vibration against a stiff, hypertrophic ventricle and makes a sound.
Heard in HOCM (can cause a double apex beat), hypertension, aortic stenosis (because LV has to pump harder to get through stenosed valve, so ends up becoming hypertrophic and stiff)
ALWAYS abnormal