Clinical: Mitral Valve Disease and Rheumatic Heart Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What on this chest x-ray would be positive for mitral regurge?

A
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2
Q

Mitral Stenosis: PE Findings

  • In Severe Pulmonary HTN/MS, and NSR, what clinical finding is usually seen, and what is the cause of this finding?
A
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3
Q

Fill in the black out boxes

A
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4
Q

In this ECG, what would indicate that this patient has mitral stenosis?

A
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5
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Treatment

  • In acute, severe MR
    • What is the only way to save these patients, and what structures usually rupture that requires emergent surgery?
A
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6
Q

Mitral Stenosis: Symptoms

  • What kind of HTN Mitral Stenosis patients have?
    • What does this type of HTN result in?
    • What happens when this type of HTN becomes severe?
A
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7
Q

Mitral Stenosis: PE Findings

  1. What happens to S1?
  2. Describe the “snap” heard upon auscultation.
    • What causes it?
  3. How can the sound tell you how severe the stenosis is?
  4. When would you hear a murmur, and where would you hear it?
    • How does this change if a patient has mixed Mitral Stenosis and Mitral Regurgitation?
A
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8
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Treatment

  • In mildly symptomatic, chronic MR or nonsurgical candidates
    • What type of drugs shows improvement with symptoms and slowing of progression of MR?
      • When do you avoid using these types of drugs?
      • What drug would you use instead?
    • If a PT also has A-fib or significant mitral stenosis, what type of drugs would additionally be prescribed?
A
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9
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Treatment

  • In symptomatic, chronic MR
    • What is generally recommended for most patients?
A
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10
Q

Mitral Stenosis: Treatment

  • How do you treat a patient with known Rheumatic Heart Disease?
  • What do you do to prevent or treat:
    • Thrombus and embolic events
    • Elevated HR
    • PulmonaryHTN
A
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11
Q
  • What is the most common cause of chronic mitral regurgitation in the United States?
  • What are the usual causes of severe acute mitral regurgitation?
    • What causes the acute MR seen in patients who have coronary artery disease?
A
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12
Q
  • What is the leading cause of mitral stenosis?
    • What are some other causes (5)?
A
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13
Q

How can you grade mitral valve stenosis using an echocardiogram?

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14
Q

Mitral Stenosis: PE Findings

  • What are the classic observational findings of severe MS
A

Mallar Flush with pinched Blue Faces

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15
Q

Describe Transcatheter Mitral Valve Repair and Replacement

A
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16
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Symptoms

  • In Acute, Severe MR
    • Pulmonary edema can develop. What conditions can arise from this?
    • What kind of pulses and sounds can be heard?
A
17
Q

What are the three causes of organic mitral regurge that are most common?

A
18
Q

What findings on the X-ray are indicated of mitral stenosis?

A
  • Chest radiograph showing generalized cardiac enlargement​
    • Left-sided heart enlargement
      • Usually left atrium but can be left ventricle. This patient has both.
  • On the lateral view, the enlarged left atrium indents the esophagus
19
Q

What is cardiac cachexia?

A
20
Q

What are the two causes of functional mitral regurge that she told us to remember?

A
21
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Treatment

  • In symptomatic, chronic MR patients who are not surgical candidates,
    • What type of drugs are the first line of treatment when patients also have ischemic heart disease or dilated CM?
    • What is the recommended treatment for MR due to
      1. MVP
      2. RHD
A
22
Q

Mitral Stenosis: Treatment and Outcomes

  • Of the surgeries, which has the highest operative mortality percentage and which has the lowest
A
23
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Etiology

  • MR results from an abnormality of one of the 5 functional components of the Mitral Valve apparatus. What are these 5 components?
A
24
Q
  • Of these operations, what has the highest operative mortality percentage and what has the lowest?
A
25
Q

How does Mitral Stenosis and decreased mitral valve area affect diastolic filling of the left ventricle?

A
26
Q

Mitral Stenosis: PE Findings

  • What PE findings would indicate that a patient with mitral stenosis has an enlarged right ventricle?
    • What happens when the right ventricle begins to fail?
A
27
Q

Mitral Stenosis: Symptoms

  • What are the physiological reasons for the dyspnea, fatigue, and cough symptoms associated with Mitral Stenosis?
  • What kind of heart rhythm can develop, and what can this type of rhythm lead to?
A
28
Q

What time of life does Rheumatic carditis peal in terms of disease symptoms?

A
29
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Symptoms

  • In Chronic, Severe MR
    • What symptoms do patients present with?
    • What PE finding would suggest A-fib?
    • What would cause the patient to have R-sided heart failure?
      • What conditions would suggest R-sided heart failure?
A
30
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Pathobiology

  • Where does abnormal blood flow occur?
  • How does forward cardiac failure occur?
  • What conditions can occur as a result of left-sided enlargement?
A
31
Q
  • What is the classic symptom that patients who have mitral stenosis have?
    • When does this symptom usually present?
    • In later stages of the disease, how does this symptom get worse?
A

Symptom can present at pregnancy too

32
Q

What on this chest x-ray would be positive for mitral regurge, due to an insufficient prosthetic mitral valve?

A
33
Q

In papillary muscle dysfunction that leads to acute MR

  • Which artery is usually affected?
  • Which wall of the heart is usually affected?
A
34
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: Treatment

  • In asymptomatic, chronic MR
    • What action is important?
    • What role do vasodilators play?
A
35
Q

Mitral Stenosis: Treatment

  • What are the indications for a percutaneous mitral balloon valvotomy (PMBV) and what are the indications for mitral valve replacement?
A
36
Q

Mitral Regurgitation: PE Findings

  • In Chronic, Severe MR
    • What kind of murmur can be heard, and where?
      • What can increase the intensity of this murmur and what can decrease it?
    • What happens to the heart sounds
    • Where is the PMI?
A
37
Q

Describe the process installing a percutaneous mitral balloon valvotomy

A
38
Q

What findings on this ECG would be indicative of mitral regurgitation?

A
39
Q
  • What does rheumatic heart disease do to the mitral valve?
    • How does the damage get worse?
A