by Mark | Jul 31, 2015 | Cardiology
Mitral Valve Regurgitation (MR) Acute MR: Acute MR Symptoms: Acute severe shortness of breath “Bolt-upright” position in bed Apical tapping Chest discomfort Acute MR Signs: Hypotension, tachycardia, LV apical tapping Soft, subtle systolic murmur +S3, S4 Rales in lungs Echocardiography in Acute MR: TTE may fail to detect severe acute MR, progress to TEE or cath on clinical suspicion Treatment of Acute Symptomatic Severe MR: Vasodilators (sodium nitroprusside or nicardipine) Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) Surgical repair/replacement stat Papillary rupture Dehisced mitral prosthesis Infective endocarditis + heart failure Chordal rupture (soon if not stat) Chronic MR: Chronic MR Symptoms Prolonged asymptomatic period, followed by: Pulmonary congestion, dyspnea on exertion Palpitations Chronic MR Signs: Pulmonary rales S3 Tapping apical impulse High-pitched late holo-systolic murmur (sounds like wind in a microphone) Holo-systolic murmur best appreciated at apex in left-lateral decubitus position Loud P2 Possible mid-systolic click (MVP) Chronic MR Epidemiology: Primary MR (organic): #1 cause is degenerative disease, #2 rheumatic disease Secondary MR (functional): dilated CMP, ischemic CMP Chronic MR is pure volume overload –> increased preload, decreased afterload LV dysfunction occurs before symptoms, so surgical decision is based on LVEF, ESD rather than symptoms LVEF DROPS after repair/replacement surgery Hypertension aggravates MR Echocardiographic Findings of Chronic MR: Echocardiographic indications for surgery: LVEF < 60% or ESD > 40 mm Other signs of severe MR: regurg. vol > 60 mL, regurg. fraction > 55%, ERO > 0.4 cm(2), PV systolic reversal, VC > 0.5 cm Note: chronic MR cannot be severe with normal LVEF and normal LV dimensions Note: ERO is not accurate in late systolic prolapse of MV (assumes holosystolic...
by Mark | Jul 29, 2015 | Cardiology
Mitral Valve Stenosis Symptoms/History: Dyspnea at rest, dyspnea on exertion (DOE) Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea R-sided HF symptoms: slow progressive orthopnea, fatigue, edema Hemoptysis Atrial Fibrillation, palpitations, resultant emboli (stroke/TIA) Potential history of rheumatic fever as a child MS Physical Exam: Loud S1, loud P2 High pitched opening snap followed by a low-pitched holodiastolic rumble at the apex RV lift Liver edge may be palpable in R-HF Possible atrial fibrillation MS Etiology/Epidemiology: MS almost always results from rheumatic fever Prolonged inflammation causes commisural fusion, diastolic leaflet doming Resultant increase in LA pressure causes LA enlargement, pulmonary hypertension, R-HF, atrial arrhythmias LV is usually unaffected in pure MS; there is pressure overload in LA, RV, RA, and pulmonary circulation Differential Diagnosis for Mitral Stenosis: cor triatriatum, atrial myxoma, PV obstruction Mitral Stenosis Stages: A: At risk (mild valvular doming) B: Progressive C: Asymptomatic severe MS (MVA < 1.5 cm(2), PHT > 150 msec, very large LA, PASP > 30 mmHg) D: Symptomatic severe MS (above, with reduced exercise tolerance and DOE) Chest X-ray in MS: enlargement of left and right atria, pulmonary congestion, LV normal size Barium swallow study may show esophagus is “pushed-back” due to LA size Echocardiogram in MS: Echo Doppler of the mitral valve gradient is the gold standard for diagnosis of mitral stenosis & severity Findings of MS on echo: commisural fusion, increased LA size, diastolic doming, hockey stick appearance, candle-flame appearance of MS jet on Doppler, M-mode with A/P thickening and moves as one unit Severe mitral stenosis: gradient > 5-10 mmHg, MVA ≤ 1.5 cm(2), PHT > 150 msec Echo is better for evaluating MS, cath is limited by...
by Mark | Jul 28, 2015 | Cardiology
Aortic Valve Stenosis (AS) Symptoms: dyspnea on exertion, dizziness/presyncope, angina, syncope (deadly) Prognosis: prognosis is worst for HF > syncope > angina Physical Exam: Late-peaking systolic ejection murmur (SEM), crescendo-decrescendo, may radiate to carotids, +/- thrill Single S2 (especially on inspiration) Carotid pulses attenuated (parvus) and delayed (tardus) +/- S4 heart sound in sinus rhythm +/- sustained apical impulse AS severity is worse with late-peaking AS increases with amyl nitrite (worsens gradient) AS decreases with standing and Valsalva maneuver (reduces preload) Causes: senile degenerative #1 (esp. > 70 yo); bicuspid, congenital, calcific, rheumatic Differential Dx: supervalvular stenosis, subvalvular stenosis, hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy A note on Bicuspid AS: + AV ejection click, associated with coarcted aorta, you must image aorta (CT/MRI) and screen 1st degree relatives AS Stages: A: At risk B: Progressive AS C: Asymptomatic Severe AS: C1 = normal LVEF, C2 = LVEF < 50% D: Symptomatic Severe AS: D1 = high gradient, D2 = low flow/gradient/LVEF, D3 = nl EF, low gr&flow Echocardiography of AS: Severe AS: peak velocity > 4 m/s, mean gradient > 40 mmHg, AVA < 1 cm(2), LVOT:AV TVI < 0.25 AVA = CO / sqrt(gradient) AVA = (LVOT area x LVOT TVI) / AV TVI Echo can underestimate AS if sampling is not parallel to valve Echo can overestimate AS if pulse wave sampling volume is in the flow convergence zone Dobutamine stress echo (DSE) is indicated for symptomatic severe AS with low EF (<50%), AVA < 1, and discrepant velocity or pressure data (peak velocity < 4 m/s or mean gradient < 40...
by Mark | Jul 26, 2015 | Cardiology
With the flood of medical literature in Cardiology, it has become more and more difficult to identify the “most important” articles. Over the next few weeks, I will attempt to outline what I think are the most important articles in Cardiology, by sub-division. Obviously I can’t include every article, but I am going to narrow down a manageable set of articles that are highly cited by guidelines and thought leaders, and will try to include links for easy reference. I would encourage anyone who reads the blog to let me know what they think and maybe contribute a few of their own. Hopefully this will generate some good discussion! Category Links (continuing updates throughout August 2015): Ischemic Heart Disease, Coronary Artery Disease, and Myocardial Infarction Cardiac Electrophysiology (EP) Heart Failure Peripheral Arterial Disease Hypertension Disclaimer © 2015 www.markmccauleymd.com. All rights served....
by Mark | Mar 19, 2015 | Personal
This week, a dear friend and mentor, Dr. Ali Massumi, died from a long battle with cancer. Dr. Massumi was a giant in Electrophysiology at the Texas Heart Institute and his impact on the field and over 200 trainees was immense. He will be sorely missed by all of us, and his legacy will live on in our hearts and in our daily practice of...
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