PANRE and PANCE Review Cardiovascular I
PANRE and PANCE Review Cardiovascular I
PANRE and PANCE Review Cardiovascular I
com
Cardiovascular
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Donald J. Sefcik is the Associate Dean at the Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine (CCOM), Midwestern University (MWU), in Downers Grove, IL. He is a tenured professor and board certified in both Emergency Medicine and Family Medicine. From June L997 through May 2000, Dr. Sefcik served as Medical Director for the Physician Assistant Program, College of Health Sciences (CHS), at MWU. Dr. Sefcik's lectures are based upon his experiences as a clinician and preceptor, tenure as a medical school faculty member, and his student assessment research.
Dr. Sefcik has practiced with physician assistants since 1988 and been involved in the clinical training of physician assistants since 1990. Prior to joining lVlidwestern Universrty's faculty, Dr. Sefcik was a faculty member in the Pharmacology Department at Butler University and in the Nursing Department at Marian College, both in Indianapolis, Indiana. Dr. Sefcik has a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy (1981), a Master of Science in Pharmacology (1994), both from Butler University, ffid an MBA (May 2004) from Purdue University.
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Learning Objectives
Upon completion of this portion of the review course, the participant should be able to:
2. 3.
4. 5. 6,
Electrocardiographs(EKC) ExerciseElectrocardiography(StressTests) Echocardiography CardiacCatheterization Ultrafast CT scans Differentiate left-sided and right-sided heart murmurs. Compare and contrast the following systolic and diastolic murmurs: r Aortic stenosis e Aortic regurgitation o Mitral stenosis o Mitral regurgitation (including MVP; Barlow's syndrome) . Right-sided valvular defects Define and describe Rheumatic heart disease. o Discuss Jones criteria. Discuss endocarditis and its classic features. Compare and contrast Roth spots, Osler's nodes and Janeway lesions.
o . . . o
Chest x-rays
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Case
A 64 year-old female presents complaining of crushing chest pain. She also advises you that she is nauseous and is experiencing indigestion. She is notably diaphoretic. Her blood pressure is 124178 mm Hg. Her 12lead EKG reveals regional ST segment elevation, Her rhythm strip is included for your interpretation.
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A. anterior aspect of the left ventricle B. posterior aspect of the right ventricle
C. D. E.
inferior aspect of the left ventricle lateral aspect of the left ventricle anteriolateral aspect of the left ventricle
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Case 1.2 Which one of the following best describes the rhythm strip?
A. first degree AV block B. second degree AV block, Mobitz type I C. second degree AV block, Mobitz type ll
D. complete heart block E. Wolf-Parkinson-White
syndrome
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Gase 2
A 36 year-old male presents complaining o{lgft-qggq ngrnlgqs for the past several hours. He relates that he is in excellent heailh-?ndmsnTseen a clinician since high school. His examination reveals murmurs, loudest at the aortic listening post, grades lllA/l systolic and llful diastolic.
Case 2.1 Which one of the following would most expeditiously provide support for your initial diagnosis?
A.
B. C. D. E.
echocardiogram fundoscopic examination examination of peripheral pulses complete neurological examination CT scan of his brain
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began to complain of a headache during your evaluation and then became 'obtunded, which of the following would you suspect as the most likely cause?
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Case 3 A 62 year-old female presents complaining of palpitations. She has experienced two previous episodes that lasted only a few minutes. This episode has lasted two hours' She is mildly short of breath, mostly because of anxiety. She denies chest pain. Her rhythm strip is included for your interpretation.
Case 3.1 Wnic-f' one of the following therapeutic choices would be LEAST effective at controlling this arrhythmia?
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Case 3.2 Which one of the following diagnostic tests would be the most likely to provide the definitive diagnosis underlying her arrhythmia?
A.
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B. free serum Ta level C. 24 hour holter monitor D. HDL cholesterol level E. serum potassium level
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Gase 4
A 56 year-old male presents complaining of severe tightness in his chest for 45 minutes. He is a smoker, with longstanding hypertension, diabetes mellitus type 2 and hyperlipidemia. His EKG reveals ST segment elevation (4 mm) and T wave changes.
Case 4.1 Which one of the following, if identified on this patient's EKG, supports the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction with a positive predictive value of greater than 90%?
A.
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Case 4.2 lf this patient is not having an acute myocardial infarction, which one of the following is
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Case 5
A 62 year-old male presents complaining of_sho of breath on exertion for the past several weeks; now he is short of breath at resl congestive
heartfaiIure.HisexaminationlffiS,SinuStachycardia,bilate-rallower
extremity edema (3+/4+), indirect (bedside) evidence of elevated right atrial pressure and a heart gallop.
Case 5.1 Which one of the following is the most specific manifestation supporting a current diagnosis of congestive heart failure in this patient?
A. bibasilar rales B. atrialgallop C. ventricular gallop D. jugular venous distention E. peripheral edema
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Case 5.2 This patient has documented diastolic dysfunction. Aggressive diuresis in this patient might cause hypotension because:
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Gase 6
A 64 year-old female presents to your practice for her first visit. She had a myocardial infarction two years ago. She currently is asymptomatic, just wants to establish rappotl with a clinician in her new neighborhood. Her blood pressure is 122174 mm Hg and her pulse is 64. Her total cholesterol is 230, with an LDL of 130. Her BMI is 24. She has no other medical problems. She follows a low fat diet and walks briskly in the mall every day.
Case 6.1 Which one of the following is the most appropriate at this time?
A. no intervention is required
@tart
Case 6.2 Six weeks later the patient presents to the Emergency Depadment complaining of 45 minutes of crushing chest pain. She has 4 mm of ST segment elevation in leads ll, lll and aVF. Her blood pressure is 142182 mm Hg and pulse is 72. Based only upon what is known, which of the following should NOT be administered to this patient?
A. aspirin
@diltiazem
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Case 7 A 68 year-old female presents to your practice complaining of dyspnea on exertion. She advises you that the symptoms began about four weeks ago. She denies chest pain, dizzine_sq qnd orthopnea. During her examination, you auscultate a grade lllA/l electiorGvsto.l*urmur that radiates into her carotids and into her axilla (loudest in the left-lateral decubitus position). \
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Case 7.1 Which one of the following is most likely a cause of the murmur that you hear?
A. aorlic regurgitation -b,tr>t B. mitral regurgitatiop - -slsrui',LC. pulmonic regurgitation rr n D. iricuspid ste-nos-is ) l)'cn'sotlc E. Austin-Flint murmur
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Case 7 .2 Which of the following sets of EKG findings would you expect to find on her EKG?
A. low voltage and sinus tachycardia B. R waves in lead V5 less than 10 mm in height and right axis deviation C. S waves in lead V2 less than 5 mm in height and left axis deviation D. right atrial enlargement and right axis deviation E. P waves in lead ll greater than 3 mm in width and P waves in lead V1 thaHl rn11n clgnth
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Case 8
, SNI_ A patient is noted tofauera'grade lllA/l crescendo-decrescendo systolic murmur that begins well after th{S1 heart sound. The murmur is most notable at the lower left sternal border. The cErotid pulsation rapidly rises.
Case 8.1 Which of the following is the most likely cause of this murmur?
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Case 9 A 76 year-old male presents after a syncopal episode. He is currently asymptomatic. Historically, he advises you thai he has suffered from exertional dyspnea and anginal chest pain. His blood pressure is
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Case Which of the following is most likely to be discovered during his examination?
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,Selecferl Cardiovas
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General usefulness Rapidly assesses cardiac silhouette and occasionally individual chamber changes Heafi:thoracic ratio > 0.5 - cardiomegaly on upright posterior-anterior (pA) film Cardiac silhouette - measured from midline to the right and to the left Transthoracic diameter measured at height of right hemidiaphragm Pulmonary veins - more horizontal
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Pulmonary arteries
more vertical
Aortic coarctation
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Absence of aortic knob Rib notching (secondary to elevated intercostal arterial pressure) h 1U Consider in younger patients refractory to therapy ( <\',c' 5lur Brachial-femoral blood pressure and pulse disparities
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Alveolar.J:ffi,rN\:c,.3eli/ uF lun5i *.1) ::ffitjl*:];^" ----.us:'\ Trt j^1 ( ..*,,*,\.\^y \ ,,\. \pericardial [q \-*-Y J.
:--t;;i"]i,]ation"ofvascutature ., fer}"s\, cf tjo;\ f:cs-+, . [email protected] lines in basal periphery; interstitial fluid)
o "water bottle " heart (not an acute chanee) --;, ^ .-^,f::=),^-^lr]l --,-. nol{lechocardiographyj confirms; quantifies fluid
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Electrocardiogram
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assesstnent for coronary artery disease (70% sensitive detection; 75Yo specifieity exclusion)
r . .
various protocols
Bruce - degree of eievation and speed changed every 3 minutes Naughton - degree of elevation changes every 2 minutes Echocardiogram (check for wall motion changes - hypokinesis)
c.
o ' .
Interpretation:
high risk]
EKG Changes
**
ST segment changes
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6 hours
. .
stress tests
3. Cardiac Catheterization a.
b. c.
Best test to "get the answer"
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Significant narowing - defined as at least 70% luminal narrowing Note: 70% luminal narrowing corresponds to 50Yo reduction in cross-sectional area
Therapeuticstratification . Low risk - Single vessel disease (usually do well with medical therapy) . High risk - Triple vessel disease (with decreased left ventricular function) Left Main Coronary artery disease
4.
Ultrafast CT Scans
a. b. c. d.
identifies coronary arterial "calcifrcation,, Does not visualize (quantify) all "blockage"
Noninvasive Role as a "Screening Test"?
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- adequate for - 90 % ofcases) a. assessment of valvular disorders b. assessment of cardiac ejection fractions c. assessment of charnbers/wall motion d. quantifies pericardial effirsions e. Doppler echocardiography measures blood flow velocity f. assessment of ventricular thrombus g. can coupie with Exercise Electocardiography r Transesophageal approach:
Echocardiography (Transthoracic
aorta
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2.
Cardiac Catheterization
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C.
Anltythmias
1.
Electrocardiogram (EKG)
a. b.
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ii.
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Ambulatory Monitors
a. Holter Monitor
b, Event Recorder
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3.
Signal-Averaged EKG
The presence of late potentials is suggestive of a risk for ventricular anhythmias
4.
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Valves
Left
Mitral
* Semilunar:
Left - Aortic
Right - Pulmonic
Heart Solutds
Mechanisms:
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3. Vessels
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Diaphraqm:
S1 (Lubb) - onset of systole
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Bell:
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Enhanced
R 5ro"gs oF pe.)pr- ; *w\._ s4-AtrialGallop(ActiveVentricularFilline) P\rrv\"'''t S 3'L'() f;t\r,.\*.-^:#. -tqw,r- J ,lurrr-., Enhancedby, ofiance ts\\d.$ft?I\ Y,]*5 pir-,r*rr) ffi'-F-4'-birn\?teL Act,rcfuJ\r.rtr1 * Venticular Hyperrophy (LVH) Przgr*Jt,
AUSCULTATE: (first with diaphragm' then bell)
Venticte(cnrLj RapidFilling(anemia'thyrotoxicosis)
Dilated
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Aortic area (2nd right ICS, RSB) Pulmonic area (2nd left ICS, LSB) -
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Tricuspid area (4th and 5th left ICS' LSB) Apex or mitral area (5 left ICS in MCL)
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MURMURS
A. What ????
a. Relatively prolonged exta heart sounds b. Heard in Systole or Diastole or Both c. Caused by turbulent blood flow into/through/out ofthe heart d. May be benign or pathologic
B. Descriptions ????
a. Timing & Duration
Early Systolic, Midsystolic (Ejection), Late Systolic Early Diastolic, Middiastolic, Late Diastolic (Presystolic) Holosystolic (Pansystolic) Holodiastolic (Pandiastolic)
Continuous
b, Intensity
Barely Audible Quiet, but clearly audible Moderately t( rnt , 6 Loud and Associated witrr Very Loud, Thrill easily pu$E5t/ Audible with Stethoscope not in contact with chest and thrill is visible
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"x" Slope:
RA relaxation during
"y"
RV Systole
(TV is closed)
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SYSTOLE
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DIASTOLE
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rheumatic fever
origin (bicuspid), calcific changes tn@ b. Causes left ventricular outflow obstruction (during systole)
one(gggenqln
Symptoms: Signs:
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Symptoms:
Signs:
Diastolic murmur (
Often 53; occasioni occasionally 54
c, Ifacute - surgery
If chronic - sugery,
once symptomatic
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Mitrat stenosis
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Symptoms:
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Signs:
ffi*' Pulmonaryhypertension/edema
atrial
(9 [""*-)
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arrhythmias
Replacement
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Many etiologies:
Chronic: Blsumatic-dsease, congenital, calcification of annulus.... * generally - best tolerated of valwlar iesions
* Commofr-Sp-to T0Tlo of females ?) * Most common cause of MR * Myxomatous changes (may be part of Marfan's syndrome) * Floppy valve - Click * Barlow's syndrome - MVP + Quasicardiologic symptoms
- - 80 % of all patients may be symptomatic - nonspecific chest pain, palpitations, shorfness of breath....
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b. Syrnptomatology Symptoms
(acute):
Symptoms
Signs Signs
(chronic):
(acute): (chronic):
c. Ifsevere - surgery
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Lesion
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Signs
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Angina
Syncope
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Notes
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OrthopnealPND
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54 (occasionally)
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LV Heave
AS DOE
Chest Pain (angina)
Syncope
MR
Acute
Dyspnea, pulmonary edema
Radiates
Aoex to axilla
Atrial fibrillation
Diastolic Rumble
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decubitus
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oosition
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@turmurs
. .
of Childhood
r r
low pitched; musical quality systolic - grade II - III / VI .r loudest iftuap.fiil;simfr-\ itiori loudest - midway from low left sternal border to apex caused by turbulent flow in left ventricular outflow
B. Venous Hum
ion; radiates i
neck
ind or head turned
as pass
jugular veins,
clavicle
o . . .
Loud 52
Gallops
Cyanosis
Clicks
:t
AR..
3. Murmur Characteristtcs
Diagnostic Maneuvers
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7 - 35 days (mean
- 18 days)
(- 20 %)
Clinical Presentation
Arthralgias
Myocarditis, Pericarditis
*MR-60-80 %;Ar-30%
Erythema marginatum < 5
Valvular
0{:8, Av b\ot VS )k tb
BUT, negative in up to
10 %)
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Jones Criteria (Must have Two Major or One Major and Two Minor) fplus evidence of Streptococcal infection, recently]
Major
S-gbgg[aneous nodules - 5 - I0 % P-olyarthritis - 75 % E-ryhqma marginatum - < 5 Yo
earditis
--65%
diagnostic Purposeless, rapid, involuntary movements
Minor
Fever
Artkalgias
&rrc Acute phase reactants - elevated C t \ R' ' -ig ^t Prolonged PR interval (increase of 0.04 seconds or more, over baseline) Previous rheumatic fever
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Infective Endocarditis
Definition
usually an infection ofthe valvular endocardium
Valves
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Predisposing Risk
Prosthetic Valves
MVP
Congenital heart malformations -- Dental procedures (transient bacteremia) Rheumatic valvular disease
IDU
Miscellaneous
Classic
Findine2r'
t
t
1
(-
10
- 50 %)
Diagnostics
Transthoracic echocardiogam
Transesophageal echocardiogram
45 - 75 % - 90 %
Blood cultures - negative in 5 - 15 % (commonly secondary to antibiotic previously prescribed or HACEK) [Hemophilus, Actinobacillus, Cardiobacterium, Eikenella, Kingella]
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