Basic Cardiovascular System and Pathological Abnormalities

Download Report

Transcript Basic Cardiovascular System and Pathological Abnormalities

Common Cardiac
Emergencies
Agustin E. Rubio, MD
Sibley Heart Center Cardiology
Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta
Emory School of Medicine
Topics
• Cyanosis & Ductal Dependence
• Emergency Room Diagnoses:
 Tetralogy of Fallot
 Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome
 Coarctation of Aorta
 SVT
• Shunt Dependent vs Non-shunt
Dependent
2
Epidemiology
 Cardiac malformations
• 10% of infant mortality
 Incidence:
• 4-6/1000 live births
 Most common lethal diagnosis:
• Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction
 Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
 Coarctation of aorta
 Aortic stenosis
3
Circulatory Transitions
 Conversion from right sided (placental oxygenation)
to left sided circulation (pulmonary oxygenation)
 Progression is secondary:
• Decreasing PVR
• Closure of ductal shunts
 Clinical presentations:
• Cyanosis
• Respiratory failure
• Shock
4
Cyanosis
 Typically, 2 g/dL of reduced hemoglobin
• 5g/dL of reduced Hb  clinical cyanosis
 The higher the Hb the less likely to have
severe cyanosis
5
Ductal Dependent Lesions
Cyanosis
CHF/Shock
Rt to Lt shunting:
Lt Ventricular Outflow
Tract Obstruction:
 Tricuspid atresia
 TOF/ Pulm atresia
 Ebstein’s anomaly
 HLHS
 Coarctation of Aorta/ AS
 Truncus arteriosus
 TGA with VSD
6
 TAPVR
Left Ventricular Outflow Tract
Obstruction
 Major source of neonatal M&M from CHD
• Accounts for ~ 12% of congenital cardiac
disease in infancy
• ~ 75% discharged from hospital w/o
diagnosis
• ~ 65% - normal newborn screen
examination
• 6% died before diagnosis
• 96% symptoms by 3 wks of life
7
Symptoms in Real-Time
Timeline of Clinical Diagnosis
Week #1
HLHS
Coarctation of aorta
TAPVR - obstucted
Week #2-6
Transposition of Great Arteries
Total Anomalous Venous Return
Truncus arteriosus
8
Tetralogy of Fallot
Tetralogy of Fallot
 Prevalence:
- 10% of CHD
 Most common
cyanotic heart defect
beyond infancy
10
Tetralogy of Fallot
 +/- Cyanosis
 Small to Nl
cardiac silhouette

11
pulmonary
vasculature
Tetralogy of Fallot
“Tet spell”
• Hyperpnea
• Worsening
cyanosis
• Disappearance of
murmur
• RBBB pattern on
ECG
12
Tetralogy of Fallot
“Tet spell”
• Treatment objectives:
 Reverse the right-to-left shunt

systemic vascular resistance (SVR)
 Correct potential acidosis with NaHCO3 &
volume
 Consider peripheral vasoconstriction
(phenylephrine – 0.02 mg/kg IV)
 Ketamine
– increase SVR and sedates 2 mg/kg over 1 min
 Morphine sulphate
 Oxygen
13
Tetralogy of Fallot
Surgical Options
14
 Blalock-Taussig shunt
 Trans-annular patch
 Delayed repair
 VSD closure
Tetralogy of Fallot
Post-operative Concerns
• Post-pericardiotomy syndrome
 ~ 4 weeks post-op (25-30% of open heart pts)
 Fever, elevated ESR and CRP
 Increased work of breathing (? pericardial
effusion)
 Cardiomegaly, pleural effusions
 ECG – persistent ST segment elevation with
flat or inverted T waves in limb & left lateral
limb leads
 Pericardiocentesis – performed when
tamponade physiology present
15
Tetralogy of Fallot
Post-operative Concerns
• Endocarditis
 Dx after >2 BCx or echo evidence
• Residual VSD
• Arrhythmias
 AV block, ventricular arrhythmias
• Remember:
 Any incision in the ventricle produces a
RBBB pattern (rSR’ in V1; wide
complex QRS)
16
Tetralogy of Fallot
Post-operative Concerns
 Arrhythmias
• TOF - 40%
increased incidence
of lethal arrhythmias
• Syncopal eventslethal ventricular
arrhythmias ??
17
Hypoplastic Left Heart
Syndrome
HLHS
19
HLHS
 Uncommon form of
cyanotic heart disease
 Most common cause of
death in the first month
of life
 Critically ill infant within
the first 7 days with low
O2 saturations
20
HLHS
Clinically:
• Progressive cyanosis and hypoxemia
• Hx of poor feeding, tachypnea and poor
weight gain
• Cardiovascular shock
• Severe acidosis
• Congestive heart failure
21
Consequences and Complications
 Polycythemia (erythrocytosis)
 Clubbing (>6 mos of age)
 Hypoxic spells
 CNS
• Cyanotic heart disease accounts for 5-10% of
brain abscesses
• Cerebral venous thrombosis - <2 yrs, cyanotic
and microcytic anemia
 Dyscrasias
22
HLHS
Pre-operative Resuscitation
 Medical management:
• Intubation
• Ventilate and oxygen
• Intravenous access
 Central/ umbilical/ intra-osseos
• Glucose
• Na HCO3
• PGE1 (get that PDA open!!)
 PGE1 0.05 mcg/kg/min
• Volume – NS/ 5% Albumin/ PRBC’s
• NIRS probe
23
HLHS
Norwood/ Blalock-Taussig Shunt
 Post-operative changes
•
•
•
•
•
•
24
Uncontrolled PBF
Re-constructed aortic outflow tract
Fluid balance sensitive
Widened pulse pressures
Tenuous coronary circulation
Single ventricle for all circulation
HLHS
Norwood/ Sano shunt
 Post-operative changes
• Direct PA
communication with RV
• Uncontrolled PBF
• Neo-aortic
reconstruction
• Higher diastolic
pressures
• Better coronary
perfusion
25
HLHS
Post-Operative Resuscitation
 Limit oxygen (remember: relative uncontrolled PBF)
 Hemoglobin
 Auscultate for murmur:
• Continuous murmur at RUSB (? BT shunt)
• Systolic murmur at RLSB/ LUSB (Sano shunt)
 Fluid balance:
• Palpate liver
• +/- rales and CXR to evaluate for CHF
• Reverse dehydration
 Reverse acidosis
26
Coarctation of Aorta
Coarctation of Aorta
 Common cause of left
sided heart failure
 95% located in
juxtaductal region
 Associated with other
congenital anomalies
 May be short segments
or long segments
28
Coarctation of Aorta
Associations:
• HLHS
• Aortic stenosis
• TOF
• Truncus arteriosus
• VSD
• DORV
• Turner’s syndrome
29
Coarctation of Aorta
Clinical
• Poor feeding, dyspnea & poor weight gain
• Upper arm vs lower extremity BP
discrepancy
 >10-20 mmHg systolic upper vs. lower
 20-30% develop CHF by 2-3 months
• Hx of lower extremity weakness or pain
after exercise
• 50% will have no murmur
30
Coarctation of Aorta
 Acute clinical presentation:
• Cardiovascular shock
 Somnolent & lethargic
 Poor po intake/ dehydrated, poor U/O
 Cold, clammy & diaphoretic
 Poor pulses
 +/- organomegaly
 Bradycardia/ tachycardia
31
Coarctation of Aorta
Laboratory Evaluation:
• CBC & ABG/VBG
• CMP, Magnesium & Phos
• Lactate
• BNP level
• CXR & 12 lead ECG
• Blood cultures
• NIRS probe
32
Coarctation of Aorta
 Neonatal Coarctation
• rSR’ in the right precordial leads (V1 &
V2)
• Deep S waves in the lateral leads
• RAD
33
Coarctation of Aorta
 Infant Coarctation
• LVH apparent (left lateral leads)
• Deep S waves in the right chest
• Large R waves in lateral leads
34
Coarctation of Aorta
Surgical repairs
35
Coarctation of Aorta
Post-operative State
 Re-coarctation
• Occurs most commonly within the first 12
months
• Evaluated by 4 extremity BP’s
• Physical examination of upper & lower
extremity pulses
36
Tachyarrhythmia:
Sinus Tach vs. SVT
Clinical Signs of Tachyarrhythmia
38
Symptoms from History
 Neonate:
• Sudden onset of
irritability&
sudden relief
• Poor po intake &
somnolence
• Inconsolable
• “Rapid heart
beat”– felt by
parents
39
 Older Child:
• Stops activity
abruptly
• “Palpitations”/
“feels funny”
• Sudden relief with
vasovagal
manuever
• Chest pain - rare
ECG Findings
Sinus Tach
Sinus Tach
40
Rhythms
SVT
 Regular rhythm, narrow QRS, HR >200, p buried
in T wave
Sinus Tach
41
 Regular rhythm <200, distinct p waves, nl
intervals
Sinus Tachycardia vs. SVT
42
SVT – Hemodynamically Stable
43
SVT – Hemodynamically Unstable
** Cardioversion should be performed in a location which can provide
for continuous monitoring and potential complications of sedation.
44
Medications for SVT
45
Laboratory Evaluation
 Electrolytes
• Calcium, Magnesium & Phosphorus
 CBC with diff
 CXR & 12 lead EKG
• looking for pre-excitation – WPW
46
Shunt Dependent
vs. Non-dependent
What’s the big deal !!!
The Difference
 Shunt Dependent
• The only source of PBF = SHUNT
 Non-Dependent
• Two sources of PBF = Shunt + some
antegrade flow through diminuitive PV
48
Shunt Dependent
 Oxygen therapy
• Limit O2 therapy for cyanosis
• Maintain sats 75-85%
• Sats can drop significantly and quickly
• If sats >85%:

PVR 
PBF  Pulmonary edema
and circulatory shock
• Use blended O2 with range of up to FiO2 0.4
49
Non-Dependent
 Oxygen therapy
• Two sources of PBF:
 One with fixed obstruction and the other is
uncontrolled
• If BT shunt present:
 Limit O2
 O2 saturations should not drop as far nor as
quickly
50
Summary
 CHD &/or arrhythmias should be suspected
neonates with cardiovascular shock
 Evaluation should include:
• CBC, cultures, electrolytes, lactate levels, Blood
gases
• CXR, 12 Lead EKG
 H&P provide 90% of diagnoses
51
Medical Management
 Airway, Breathing, Circulation
 What disease and what was the repair?
 Prostaglandins
• 0.03 to 0.1 mcg/kg/min
• Side effects:
 Hyperpyrexia
 Apnea
 Flushing
52
Miscellaneous
What information do we require?
• 4 extremity BP’s, weight %iles
• H&P
 Murmurs
 Organomegaly
 Pulses
 ECG
 Labs, CXR findings, saturations
53
Sources
 Internet websites:
• www.childrenshospital.org
• www.cincinattichildrens.org
• www.ucsfhealth.org/childrens/
 Pediatric Cardiology for the Practioners. MK Park
4th ed.
 Congenital Heart Disease - Moss and Adams
54