Transcript Slide 1
Valvular Diseases • Causes of valve regurgitation – congenital, senile degeneration, acute and chronic rheumatic carditis, infective endocarditis, syphilitic aortitis – traumatic valve rupture, damage to chordae and papillary muscles (e.g. in MI), dilated valve ring (e.g. dilated CMP) • Causes of valve stenosis – congenital, senile degeneration – rheumatic carditis • Common clinical scenarios – Young people: functional murmurs, MVP, AS – Old people: aortic sclerosis, aortic stenosis 1 Mitral Stenosis • Symptoms – pulmonary congestion: dyspnea, cough, hemoptysis (also due to PE) – chest pain (PH), edema and ascites (RVF) – fatigue (low COP), palpitation (AF), thromboembolic complications • Signs – inspection: mitral facies – palpation: tapping apex (palpable first heart sound), RV heave (PH) – auscultation: loud first heart sound, loud P2 (PH), opening snap, rumbling mid-diastolic murmur, presystolic accentuation – atrial fibrillation, raised pulmonary capillary pressure: crepitations, pulmonary edema, effusion 2 Mitral Stenosis • ECG – LA hypertrophy, RVH, AF • CXR – enlarged LA, pulmonary venous congestion • Echo – thick immobile cusps, reduced valve area, reduced rate of LV diastolic filling • Doppler – pressure gradient across MV, pulmonary artery pressure • Cardiac catheterization – pulomnary wedge pressure, pressure gradient between LA and LV 3 Mitral Stenosis • Medical management – – – – digoxin for AF + BB or CA diuretics for pulmonary congestion anticoagulant to reduce the risk of systemic emboli antibiotic prophylaxis against infective endocarditis • Mitral balloon valvoplasty – – – – – significant symptoms isolated MS no to trivial MR mobile non-calcific valve / subvalvular apparatus on echo LA free of thrombus • Mitral valve surgery – closed mitral valvotomy – open mitral valvotomy – mitral valve replacement: mechanical, bioprosthesis [St. Jude (bi-leaflet), Carpentier-Edwards (porcine), Medtronics (single leaflet, open)] 4 Mitral Regurgitation • Causes – mitral valve prolapse (myxomatous changes) is the most common cause in developed world – damage to cusps: rheumatic valve disease, IE, congenital cleft mitral valve – damage to chordae: rheumatic valve disease, IE, trauma, degenerative – damage to papillary: ischemia, infarction, infiltrative, HCM – damage of annulus: calcification, IE (abscess) – dilation of MV ring: IHD, CMP, acute rheumatic valve • Symptoms – dyspnea, edema, ascites, fatigue, palpitations (AF, increased stroke volume), thromboembolic complications • Signs – jerky pulse (AF), displaced apex (hyperdynamic circulation) – 3rd heart sound, apical pansystolic murmur with or without thrill – signs of pulmonary congestion and pulmonary hypertension 5 Mitral Regurgitation • ECG – LAH, LVH, AF • CXR – enlarged LA, enlarged LV, pulmonary venous congestion • Echo – dilated LA and LV, dynamic LV, structural abnormalities (e.g. MVP) • Doppler – detects and quantifies MR • Cardiac catheterization – dilated LA and LV, MR, assess PH, detect co-existing CAD 6 Mitral Regurgitation • Medical (mild and moderate cases) – diuretics, vasodilators (e.g. ACEI) – digoxin and anticoagulant (for AF) – antibiotic prophylaxis (for IE) • Surgical – MV valvoplasty (repair) – MV replacement • Indications for surgery – worsening symptoms – progressive cardiomegaly – deterioration of LV function: EF < 60%, LVEDD > 55 • Complications of artificial valves – IE, thromboembolic complications, hemolysis, valve dysfunction 7 Mitral Regurgitation • Emergency minor criteria for surgery in isolated severe chronic MR – any symptoms of heart failure or suboptimal exercise tolerance test – flail mitral leaflet – left atrial diameter > 45 mm – paroxysmal atrial fibrillation – abnormal exercise end-systolic volume index or ejection fraction • MVP – asymptomatic, acute MR (ruptured chordae), chronic MR, CHF – mid-systolic click, late systolic murmur or pan-systolic murmur – increased risk for IE, arrhythmias, embolic stroke and TIA (small), sudden death (rare) 8 Aortic Stenosis • Causes – young patient: thick congenital bicuspid valve, unicuspid valve, supravalvular stenosis, subvalvular stenosis (discrete, diffuse) – middle age: thick bicuspid valve, rheumatic disease – old age: thick degenerative valve, calcification of bicuspid valve, rheumatic AS 9 Aortic Stenosis • Symptoms – angina, exertional pre-syncope and dizziness, dyspnea, impaired exercise tolerance, episodes of acute pulmonary edema, sudden death – other signs of LVF (systolic and diastolic dysfunction) • Signs – slow-rising carotid pulse, narrow pulse pressure, thrusting apex beat (LV pressure overload) – ejection systolic murmur, basal crepitations • Severity – indicated by: diamond-shaped murmur, anacrotic pulse, paradoxical S2, S4 (LVH), S3 (LVF) – not indicated by: intensity, presence of thrill 10 Aortic Stenosis • ECG – LVH, LBBB, normal • CXR – enlarged LV, dilated ascending aorta, calcified AV, normal • Echo – calcified AV with restricted opening, thickened LV walls • Doppler – detects AR, estimates gradient • Cardiac catheterization – systolic gradient between LV and aorta, post-stenotic dilation of aorta, detects AR if present, detect presence of CAD 11 Aortic Stenosis • Medical – – – – prophylaxis against IE anticoagulants if in AF diuretics for pulmonary congestion (cautiously) vasodilators are contraindicated • Surgical – mechanical AV replacement: symptomatic with normal COP and valve gradient > 50 – bioprosthesis: symptomatic elderly (disk valve, caged-ball valve, bio-prosthetic valve) – aortic balloon valvoplasty: congenital AS • Mechanical versus bioprosthetic valve – mechanical: durable, large orifice, best in left side, high thromboembolic potential, chronic warfarin therapy – bioprosthetic: not durable, small orifice/functional stenosis, best in tricuspid orifice, low thromboembolic potential, consider in elderly 12 Aortic Regurgitation • Congenital: – bicuspid AV, cystic medial necrosis (Marfan, EhlersDanlos, osteogenesis imperfecta, pseudoxanthoma elasticum) • Acquired – rheumatic heart disease, dilated aorta – degenerative, connective tissue disorders (ankylosing spondylitis, rheumatoid arthritis, Reiter, giant-cell arteritis), syphilis (chronic aortitis) – acute AR: infective endocarditis, trauma, dissecting aneurysm 13 Aortic Regurgitation • Symptoms – mild to moderate: asymptomatic, palpitations – severe: dyspnea, orthopnea, PND, chest pain (noctural and exertional angina) if aortic diastolic pressure < 40 • Signs (peripheral) – – – – – – – – Quincke sign: capillary pulsation Corrigan sign: water hammer pulse Bisferens pulse (AS/AR > AR) DeMusset sign: systolic head bobbing Mueller sign: systolic pulsation of uvula Durosier sign: femoral retrograde bruits Traube sign: pistol shot femorals Hill sign: lower extremity BP > upper extremity BP by > 20 mmHg (mild), > 40 mmHg (moderate), > 60 mmHg (severe) – widened pulse pressure • Signs (central) – apex: enlarged, displaced, hyperdynamic (forcible nonsustained), palpable S3, Austin-Flint murmur – diastolic murmur: length correlates with severity (chronic), in acute murmur shortens as DP=LVEDP, mitral pre-closure 14 Aortic Regurgitation • ECG – LVH, T inversion • CXR – cardiac dilation, aortic dilation, pulmonary congestion • Echo – dilated LV, hyperdynamic LV, fluttering AML • Doppler – detects reflux • Cardiac catheterization – dilated LV, AR, dilated aortic root • Assessing severity – more severity with more peripheral signs and larger LV – S3, Austin-Flint murmur, LVH, radiological cardiomegaly 15 Aortic Regurgitation • Medical – diuretics for pulmonary congestion, vasodilators (ACEI) – prophylaxis against IE, treatment of underlying cause (e.g. IE, syphilis) • Surgical – AV replacement: mechanical or bioprosthesis – aortic root replacement: for dilated aortic root (Marfan, syphilis, dissecting aneurysm) if LVEDD > 55, EF > 55%, FS > 27% • Criteria for replacement – symptoms: congestive heart failure, declining exercise tolerance on exercise testing, angina – anatomy: LV dysfunction (EF < 50%), progressive LV dilation or decline in EF on serial studies, severe dilation (LVDD > 75 mm, LVSD > 55 mm, aortic root dimension > 50) 16 Tricuspid Stenosis • Causes – rheumatic: almost always have associated MS (signs of PH), isolated TS is rare, uncorrected TS worsens survival chance for patients undergoing surgery for AV or MV – carcinoid: mainly affects TV and PV • Clinical – similar to MS, JVD, edema, ascites, hepatomegaly – rumbling diastolic murmur with opening snap accentuated with respiration 17 Tricuspid Regurgitation • Causes – functional overload: pulmonary hypertension, RV dilation from infarction or myopathy – structural leaflet abnormalities: infectious endocarditis, congenital (Ebstein anomaly), acquired (carcinoid, plantain diet, ergot drugs) • Clinical – asymptomatic (tolerated for years), JVD – high-pitch blowing holosystolic murmur varying with respiration (RiveroCarvallo sign) in xyphoid area – complications: right heart failure, renal failure • Treatment – none to treat underlying condition – diuretics, salt restriction – valve replacement, rings • Markers of severity – large pulsations in neck, pulsatile enlarged liver, widespread edema (anasarca, Michelin tire man), RV S3 (increases with respiration) 18 Pulmonary Stenosis • typically congenital – valvular, supravalvular, subvalvular (infundibular) • RVH • harsh systolic ejection murmur at 2nd left interspace (crescendo-decrescendo), thrill 19 Pulmonary Regurgitation • Causes – – – – PH (most common) IE, rheumatic disease, carcinoid heart disease congenital defects, trauma physiological is normal variant • Assessment – color flow doppler: right atrial enlargement, right ventricular volume overload – typical murmur: low-pitched diastolic murmur heard at left sternal border increasing with inspiration – PH murmur: high-pitched blowing diastolic murmur at left parasternal border (Graham-Steele murmur) 20