25 September 2009

Arrhythmias and EKGs



Arrhythmias and EKGs

Outline
* Sinus Arrhythmia and Sick Sinus Syndrome
* Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia
* Bigeminal Rhythms
* Preexcitation and AVRT

Mechanisms of Arrhythmogenesis
Sinus Arrhythmia
EKG Characteristics: Presence of sinus P waves
Variation of the PP interval which cannot be q attributed to either SA nodal block or PACs

When the variations in PP interval occur in phase with respiration, this is considered to be a normal variant. When they are unrelated to respiration, they may be caused by the same etiologies leading to sinus bradycardia.

Sick Sinus Syndrome
* Characterized by a collection of symptoms and ECG findings due to chronic dysfunction of the sinoatrial (SA) node:
o Chronic and severe sinus bradycardia
o Sinus pauses
o Sinus arrhythmia
o Complete sinus arrest
o Progressive development of atrial arrhythmias (a-flutter, a-fib, atrial tachycardia)
* Patients are usually elderly and present with lightheadedness and/or syncope, but it can also manifest as angina, dyspnea, and palpitations.

* About 50% of people with SSS also display some degree of dysfunction of the AV node
Sinus bradycardia (rate of ~43 bpm) with a sinus pause

Etiologies of Sick Sinus Syndrome
Familial SSS (due to mutations in SCN5A)
Infiltrative diseases
Pericarditis
Lyme disease
Hypothyroidism
Rheumatic fever
Sinus node firbosis
Atherosclerosis of the SA artery
Congenital heart disease
Excessive vagal tone
Drugs
Tachycardia-Bradycardia Syndrome
* Common variant of sick sinus syndrome severe bradycardia alternates with paroxysmal tachycardias, most often atrial fibrillation.
* There is usually a prolonged pause in the cardiac rhythm following cessation of the tachyarrhythmia.
Tachycardia-Bradycardia Syndrome
Abrupt termination of atrial flutter with variable AV block, followed by sinus arrest with a junctional escape beat.

Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia
Bigeminal Rhythms
* Arrhythmias in which each normal sinus beat is followed by a premature contraction (PAC, PJC, or PVC).
* Results in a couplet rhythm which can be detected by pulse or auscultation.
* Generally benign
Atrial Bigeminy
Ventricular Bigeminy
Preexcitation
ECG Characteristics of WPW:
1. Short PR interval
2. QRS prolongation
3. Delta wave
Preexcitation is a condition characterized by an accessory pathway of conduction, which allows the heart to depolarize in an atypical sequence.
The most common form of preexcitation is called Wolfe-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, in which a direct atrioventricular connection allows the ventricles to begin depolarization while the standard action potential is still traveling through the AV node.

AV Reentrant Tachycardia (AVRT)
In patients with WPW, a reentrant rhythm can be generated where the AV node serves as one arm of the reentrant circuit, and the accessory pathway as the other.

Types of AVRT
* Orthodromic AVRT (More common) – Narrow complex tachycardia in which the wave of depolarization travels down the AV node and retrograde up the accessory pathway.
* Antidromic AVRT (Less common) – Wide complex tachycardia in which the wave of depolarization travels down the accessory pathway and retrograde up the AV node.

Mechanism of orthodromic AVRT
Mechanism of antidromic AVRT
What is this arrhythmia?
Antidromic AVRT
Classification Scheme for Arrhythmias

Arrhythmias and EKGs.ppt

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Joints of the Foot



Joints of the Foot

There are 26 bones in the foot; all but five are involved in at least two joints.
* Hind foot
* Midfoot
* Forefoot
* foot biomechanics1

Subtalar joint: where the talus rests on and articulates with the calcaneus. This is a synovial joint with a weak capsule supported by medial, lateral, posterior & interosseous talocalcaneal ligaments.

* The interosseous talocalcaneal ligament (very strong) lies in the tarsal sinus (separates the anterior & posterior talocalcaneal joints).
* Anatomical subtalar joint- functionally a single synovial joint between the slightly concave articular surface of the talus and the convex posterior articular surface of the calcaneus.

Important Intertarsal joints:
1. Subtalar (talocalcaneal) joint
2. Transverse tarsal joint (calcaneocuboid & talonavicular)

* The main movement at these joints are foot eversion & inversion, eversion is augmented by extension of the toes (especially the lateral toes), inversion is augmented by toe flexion especially the 1st &2nd toes.

Transverse tarsal joints – a compound joint
1. Talonavicular part of the talocalcanealnavicular joint

2. Calcaneocuboid joint

* These 2 separate joints are aligned transversely. At this joint the forefoot & midfoot rotate as a unit on the hind foot around an AP axis. This augments inversion/eversion of the foot.
* Anatomical amputations of the foot are made through this joint.


1. Intertarsal joints:
These bones are so tightly opposed by ligaments that little movement occurs between them

2. Tarsometatarsal joints:
Plane type synovial joints involved in gliding/sliding type movements

3. Metatarsophalangeal joints
Flexion/extension in the foot occurs at the metatarsalphalangeal joints & the interphalangeal joints

4. Interphalangeal joints
Each has plantar, medial & lateral collateral ligaments, dorsal extensor aponeuroses act as dorsal ligaments.

All the joints proximal to the metatarsalphalangeal joints are united by dorsal & plantar ligaments.

All the bones of the metatarsals and interphalangeal joints are united by lateral & medial collateral ligaments.

Major ligaments of the Plantar foot
Plantar calcaneonavicular (Spring) ligament

* Fills a wedge shaped gap between the talar shelf & inferior margin of the posterior articular surface of the navicular. This ligament supports the head of the talus and plays an important role in the transfer of weight from the talus & maintaining the longitudinal arch.

Long Plantar Ligament
* Traverses from the plantar surface of the calcaneus to the groove on the cuboid. Some fibers extend to the base of the metatarsals (forming a tunnel for the tendon of the fibularis longus. This ligament is important in maintaining the longitudinal arch.

Plantar calcaneocuboid (short plantar) ligament:
* Located deep to the long plantar ligament, it runs from the anterior part of the inferior surface calcaneus to the inferior surface of the cuboid. It is located on a plane between the plantar calcaneonavicular (spring) ligament and the long plantar ligament. It is also involved in maintenance of the longitudinal arch.

Arches of the Foot
* The ligamentous bony arrangement of the foot allows considerable flexibility/deformation with weight bearing contact. The arches distribute the weight of the foot (pedal platform) acting both as shock absorbers & spring boards during ambulation of all types.
* Weight distribution is between the calcaneus and sesamoid bones at the 1st metatarsal and head of the 2nd metatarsal; weight is shared laterally with the heads of metatarsals 3-5. Elastic arches between weight bearing points compress with loading and recoil with unloading.
* Lateral Longitudinal arch
* Medial Longitudinal arch
* Transverse Arch

All three work as a unit in weight bearing

* Medial Longitudinal Arch higher and more prominent than the lateral arch.
* Consists of the calcaneus, talus, navicular, 3 cuneiforms and 3 metatarsals
* Talar head is the keystone of the medial longitudinal arch
* The medial arch is supported by the Tibialis anterior ligament as it attaches to the 1st metatarsal and medial cuneiform. Also the tib posterior & FHL.
* The tendon of the fibularis longus passes from lateral to medial and also supports the medial longitudinal arch.
* Lateral Longitudinal Arch is much flatter and consists of the calcaneus, cuboid & lateral metatarsals.
* The medial arch is involved in weight bearing while the lateral arch is involved in balance
* Transverse arch: cuboid, cuneiforms and bases of the metatarsals. This forms the medial & lateral parts of the longitudinal arches which serve as pillars fro the transverse arch.
* The tendon of the fibularis longus & tibialis posterior crossing the sole of the foot obliquely help maintain the curve of the transverse arch.
* The Arches of the foot are maintained by both passive & dynamic supports.

Passive factors
1. Shape of the united bones (especially the transverse arch).

2. 4 layers of fibrous tissue
o 1. Plantar aponeurosis
o 2. Long plantar ligament
o 3. Short plantar ligament
o 4. Spring ligament

Dynamic Support
1. Active (reflexive) bracing action of the intrinsic muscles of the foot support the longitudinal arches.
2. Active & tonic contraction of muscles & tendons extending into the foot:
Longitudinal arch
flexor hallicus longus
flexor digitorum longus
Transverse arch
fibularis longus
tibialis posterior &anterior
3. Plantar ligaments & aponeurosis bear the greatest stress and are most important in maintaining the arches.

Pes Planis (flat feet)
Prior to 3 years of age it is normal to have flat feet due to a fat pad. After the age of 3 this fat pad disappears.

Pes planis can be classified as:

* Flexible: the arch is normal when unloaded however with loading the arch is lost. this is the most common type. It is due to inadequate passive arch support (weak, loose ligaments).
* Rigid type, the arch is absent regardless of loading, this may be due to a congenital deformity.

* Acquired “fallen arches” is due to a tibialis posterior dysfunction due to trauma, denervation and/or degeneration. The plantar calcaneal ligament fails allowing the head of the talus to rotate inferomedially creating a prominence on the medial aspect of the mid-hind foot junction. This is often referred to as over pronation.

Talipes equinovarus (Club foot)
* Club Foot
* A congenital deformity males/females 2/1 Foot inverted, ankle plantarflexed and forefoot abducted. The abnormality is related to short, tight muscles, tendons and ligaments.

* Orthopedic Subtalar joint: anatomical subtalar joint + talocalcaneal part of the talocalcaneonavicular joint (these straddle the interosseous talocalcaneal ligament
* The main movement at this subtalar joint is inversion/eversion.

Joints of the Foot.ppt

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Opioid Analgesics & Antagonists



Opioid Analgesics & Antagonists

* Pain management

Opioid Analgesics & Antagonists

* Severe or chronic malignant pain opioids are the drugs of choice.
* Opioids are natural or synthetic compounds that produce morphine-like effects; opiates are drugs obtained from the juice of the opium poppy.
* All drugs in this category act through binding to specific opioid receptors in the CNS to mimic the effects of endogenous agents (endorphins & enkephalins) that eliminate many of the symptoms of a pain syndrome.
* Their anxiolytic and euphoric effects have led to their abuse.

Opioid Receptors

* Opioids interact stereospecifically with protein receptors on the membranes of certain cells in the CNS, on nerve terminals in the periphery and on cells of the gastrointestinal tract and the anatomic regions.
* The major effects of opioids are mediated through three receptor families: μ, κ and δ.
* Analgesic properties are mediated mainly via μ receptors and κ receptors of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.
* Enkephalins interact more selectively with the δ receptors in the periphery.
* All three families are G-protein coupled receptors and inhibit adenylate cyclase.
* They are also involved in postsynaptic hyperpolarization (increasing K+ efflux) or reducing presynaptic Ca++ influx; this inhibits neuronal activity.

Receptor distribution

High densities of opioid receptors have been identified on peripheral nerve fibers, immune cells and five general areas of the CNS:

1. Brainstem: mediating respiration, cough, nausea & vomiting, maintenance of BP, papillary diameter and control of stomach secretion.

2. Medial thalamus: mediating poorly localized deep pain

3. Spinal cord: receptors located in the substantia gelatinosa are involved in the receipt & integration on sensory input leading to the attenuation of painful afferent stimuli.

Receptor distribution

4. Hypothalamus: mediating neuroendocrine secretion.

5. Limbic system: the greatest concentration of receptors are located in the amygdale, these receptors play a major role in emotional behavior & response and little analgesic effect.

Receptor distribution

6. Periphery: Peripheral nerve fibers bind opioids, they inhibit Ca+2 dependent release of excitatory, pro-inflammatory substances (substance P) from nerve endings

7. Immune cells: the role of these receptors in analgesia is undetermined.

Opioid Agonists

* The strongest naturally occurring analgesic drugs are found in opium from the poppy flower, morphine and less potent codeine. These drugs show a high affinity for the μ receptor and less affinity for the κ and δ receptors.

Morphine


Mechanism of Action:

* Opioids exert their major effects through interaction with central & peripheral opioid receptors, binding results in hyperpolarization, inhibition of nerve firing and presynaptic inhibition of transmitter release.
* Morphine acts at the κ receptors in lamina I & II of the substantia gelatinosa of the cord and decreases the release of substance P, it also inhibits the release of excitatory transmitters from nociceptive nerve terminals centrally and in the cord.

Actions:

Analgesia:

* Opioids cause pain relief by both raising the pain threshold at the spinal cord level and altering the central perception of pain. Awareness of pain remains but it loses its unpleasant character.

Euphoria:

* Opioids produce a sense of contentment and well being, this may be

related to stimulation of the central tegmental tract.

Respiration:

* Opioids cause respiratory depression by decreasing the sensitivity of central respiratory neurons to CO2. This occurs at therapeutic doses and as dose increases respiratory arrest will occur.

Suppression of cough reflex

* Antitussive properties do not correlate with analgesic or respiratory depression effects; this appears mediated via a different receptor complex.

Actions:

Miosis:

* This results from stimulation of μ and κ receptors located in the Edinger-Westphal nucleus of CN III, this is resistant to tolerance, pin point pupils remain after most other opioid effects have developed tolerance.

Emesis:

* Opioids directly stimulate the chemoreceptor trigger zone in the area postrema that causes vomiting.

GI tract:

* Opioids relieve diarrhea by decreasing gut motility and increasing the tone of intestinal smooth muscle. Constipation is also resistant to tolerance. Biliary spasm is exacerbated by increasing biliary tone with sphincter of Oddi spasm.

Cardiovascular:

* At large doses morphine produces hypotension & bradycardia.

Actions:

Histamine release:

* Morphine causes mast cell degranulation with the release of histamine causing urticaria, itching, diaphoresis and vasodilation. In asthmatics it may precipitate bronchospasm.

Hormonal Actions:

* Morphine inhibits the release of GnRH, CRH and deceases the release of LH, FSH & ACTH and β-endorphin. Testosterone and cortisol levels decrease. Prolactin and GH release are increased via suppression of dopamine levels centrally. ADH release is also diminished.

Therapeutic Uses

* Analgesia: Few drugs are as effective as morphine for the relief of pain.
* Treatment of diarrhea
* Anti-tussive: codeine and dextromethorphan are congeners with greater antitussive effects.
* Pulmonary edema: IV morphine dramatically relieves the dyspnea associated with pulmonary edema due to LV failure.

Pharmacokinetics

1. Administration: Morphine is poorly absorbed orally; codeine is a much more effective oral analgesic. Both undergo extensive first pass metabolism in the liver. Inhalation is an effective route but has found favor only with non-medicinal administration.

2. Distribution: Morphine readily enters all body tissues except the brain; morphine is the least lipid soluble of the opiates (fentanyl, methadone and heroin all enter the CNS much more quickly).

3. Metabolism: Conjugated in the liver, morphine–6-glucuronide is a much more potent analgesic; however morphine-3-glucuronide is less analgesic. Both are excreted in the urine with small amounts excreted in the bile. Hepatic & renal dysfunction both prolong the normal 4-6 hour duration of action when administered systemically.

Adverse effects

* Severe respiratory depression can occur and is the mechanism of dearth in most opiate overdose. Vomiting, dysphoria and allergic reactions are also common adverse effects.
* Caution must be exercised when opiates are used in those with liver or renal failure.

Tolerance & Physical Dependence

Repeated use produces tolerance to the effects of respiratory depression, analgesia, euphoria and sedation. Tolerance does not develop to miosis and constipation. Physical & psychological dependence readily occur with morphine and other opiates. Withdrawal induces a syndrome associated with autonomic, motor and psychological responses that are incapacitating, rarely are these life threatening.

Meperidine

* Meperidine (Demerol) is a synthetic opioid structurally unrelated to morphine.
* Mechanism: It binds to μ receptors with some binding at κ receptors.
* Actions: It causes respiratory depression similar to morphine but has no significant cardiovascular effect when given orally. IV administration produces a decrease in PVR resulting in increased peripheral blood flow. It causes papillary dilation via an atropine –like effect.

Meperidine

* Therapeutic uses: Severe acute pain, it lacks anti-tussive activity and produces less smooth muscle contraction/spasm than morphine.
* Pharmacokinetics: It is well absorbed form the GI tract; it is most often given IM. It has a shorter duration of action than morphine (2-4 hours). It is demethylated in the liver and excreted in the urine.
* Adverse effects: With large repeated doses normeperidine (demethylated meperidine) accumulates causing anxiety, muscle tremors and convulsions. It causes papillary dilation (vs. miosis with morphine) in large doses. There is cross-tolerance with other opioids.

Methadone

* This is a synthetic orally effective opioid that is equipotent to morphine but induces less euphoria and has a longer duration of action.
* Mechanism of action: Methadone binds to the μ receptor.
* Actions: Methadone is well absorbed orally and is an equipotent analgesic to morphine. It causes miosis, respiratory depression, biliary spasm and constipation just like morphine.

* Therapeutic uses: It is used for controlled withdrawal from heroin & morphine. Methadone is it self addictive but the withdrawal syndrome is somewhat milder but more protracted than with other opioids.
* Pharmacokinetics: Readily absorbed orally it is highly protein bound so remains in tissues for a prolonged period. It is transformed in the liver and excreted by the urine as mostly inactive metabolites.
* Adverse effects: similar to morphine particularly the risk of addiction

Fentanyl

* Chemically related to merperidine fentanyl has 100 times the analgesic potency of morphine. It has a rapid onset of action and a short duration (15-30 minutes. It can be used IV, epidurally or intrathecally. Transmucosal and transdermal preparations are available. Fentanyl is metabolized to an inactive metabolite by the cytochrome p4503A4 system. Drug metabolites are eliminated through the urine. Like morphine fentanyl causes miosis (vs. mydriasis). A particular risk of the transmucosal or transdermal routes is respiratory depression; these delivery routes create a reservoir of drug in the skin or mucosa.
* Sufentanil, Alfentanil & Remifentanil are related to fentanyl they differ in their potency and metabolic disposition. Sufentanil is even more potent than fentanyl.

Heroin


* Heroin is produced by the diacetylation of morphine which results in a three fold increase in its potency. The acetylation allows it to cross the BBB much more rapidly yielding a more pronounced euphoria. It may be used IV or smoked, both allow for rapid distribution, heroin is metabolized to morphine. There is no medical indication for its use in the US.

Moderate Agonists

Codeine

* This is a much less potent analgesic than morphine, it produces less euphoria and has much lower abuse potential and rarely produces physical dependence.
* It is an effective oral analgesic. It does possess significant antitussive effects at subanalgesic doses.
* Codeine is often formulated with either acetaminophen, aspirin of ibuprofen; care but be exerted when these are used with over the counter analgesic to avoid overdose with the non-opioid agent.
* A synthetic congener of codeine dextromethorphan lacks analgesic properties is an effective antitussive available without prescription.

Moderate Agonists

Oxycodone

* This is a semisynthetic derivative of morphine that is orally active; it too is formulated with over-the-counter analgesics. It is metabolized in the liver and excreted via the kidney. Controlled release forms of oxycontin requiring once or twice a day dosing are effective for chronic pain. Crushing these pills disrupts the sustained release mechanism resulting in acute intoxication consistent with opiate overdose.

Moderate Agonists

Hydrocodone is a semi-synthetic opioid derived from two of the naturally occurring opiates, codeine and thebaine. Hydrocodone is an orally active narcotic analgesic and antitussive. It is commonly available in tablet, capsule, and syrup form and is often compounded with other analgesics like acetminophen or ibuprofen

Moderate Agonists

Propoxyphene

* This is a derivative of methadone, it is used for mild to moderate pain; it has ~1/2 the potency of codeine.
* It is often formulated with another over-the-counter analgesic. The combination has greater effect than either drug alone.
* Toxic doses may produce cardio and pulmonary toxicity particularly when taken in combination with alcohol and/or sedatives in addition to CNS depression. Opioid antagonists can reverse the pulmonary and CNS effects but not the cardiotoxixity.

Mixed Agonist-Antagonist and Partial Agonists

Buprenorphine

* This agent is a partial agonist at μ receptors producing morphine-like effects in naïve users but precipitating withdrawal in morphine dependents.
* It is metabolized in the liver and excreted in the urine and bile. This agent may be taken sublingually or parenteral and possess a long duration of action.
* Adverse effects respiratory depression not reversible by naloxone, hypotension and nausea.
* Its main use is in opioid detoxification as its withdrawal syndrome appears less severe and of shorter duration than methadone. It is available outside of the specialized clinic allowed to dispense methadone for opiate withdrawal.

Antagonists

Opioid antagonists bind with high affinity to the μ, κ & δ receptors but fail to transducer. In normal individuals these agents produce no effect but in those with opiates present they induce an acute withdrawal syndrome.

A. Naloxone

* This agent is used to reverse the coma and respiratory depression associated wit opioid overdose. It competes at all receptors with much greater avidity than agonists. IV administration produces a reversal of CNS & respiratory depression within ~30 seconds. It has a relatively short T1/2 (60-100 minutes) so reversal will often abate requiring repeat administration. Binding affinity is 10X greater at the μ receptor than κ; this may explain how naloxone reverses respiratory depression but not analgesia (resulting from agonism of the κ- receptors in the spinal cord).

B. Naltrexone

* This agent has similar actions as naloxone but it is an oral agent with a much longer duration of action, a single dose is able to antagonize the effects of heroin for up to 48 hours.

Opioid Analgesics & Antagonists.ppt

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