03 October 2009

The Cardiovascular Examination



Valvular Heart Disease and the Cardiac Exam
By:Charlotte Bai, M.D.
Internal Medicine Board Review
May 28, 2009

Overview
* Clinical syndromes
* Overview of cardiac murmurs and maneuvers
* Left sided valvular lesions
o Aortic stenosis and sclerosis
o Mitral stenosis
+ Rheumatic fever prophylaxis
o Acute and chronic aortic regurgitation
o Acute and chronic mitral regurgitation
* Right sided valvular lesions
o Tricuspid valve disease
* Prosthetic valves
* Endocarditis prophylaxis
* Questions

General Appearance
* Marfan Syndrome
o Tall, long extremities
o Associated with: aortic root dilitation, MV prolapse
* Acromegaly
o Large stature, coarse facial features, “spade” hands
o Associated with: Cardiac hypertrophy
* Turner Syndrome
o Web neck, hypertelorism, short stature
o Associated with: Aortic coarctation, pulmonary stenosis
* Pickwickian Syndrome
o Severe obesity, somnolence
o Associated with: Pulmonary hypertension
* Fredreich ataxia
o Lurching gait, hammertoe, pes cavus
o Associated with: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
* Duchenne type muscular dystrophy
o Pseudohypertrophy of the calves
o Cardiomyopathy
* Ankylosing spondylitis
o Straight back syndrome, stiff (“poker”) spine
o Associated with: AI, CHB (rare)
* Lentigines (LEOPARD syndrome)
o Brown skin macules that do not increase with sunlight
o Associated with: HOCM, PS
“Spade” hands in acromegaly
* Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Osler-Weber-Rendu)
o Small capillary hemangiomas on the face or mouth
o Associated with: Pulmonary arteriovenous fistula
* Lupus
o Butterfly rash on face, Raynaud phenomenon- hands, Livedo reticularis
o Associated with: Verrucous endocarditis, Myocarditis, Pericarditis
* Pheochromocytoma
o Pale diaphoretic skin, neurofibromatosis- café-au-lait spots
o Associated with: Catecholamine-induced secondary dilated CM
* Sarcoidosis
o Cutaneous nodules, erythema nodosum
o Associated with: Secondary cardiomyopathy, heart block
* Tuberous Sclerosis
o Angiofibromas (face; adenoma sebaceum)
o Associated with: Rhabdomyoma
* Myxedema
o Coarse, dry skin, thinning of lateral eyebrows, hoarseness of voice
o Associated with: Pericardial effusion, LV dysfunction

Grading the Intensity of Cardiac Murmurs
* Grade 1
o Murmur heard with stethoscope, but not at first
* Grade 2
o Faint murmur heard with stethoscope on chest wall
* Grade 3
o Murmur hears with stethoscope on chest wall, louder than grade 2 but without a thrill
* Grade 4
o Murmur associated with a thrill
* Grade 5
o Murmur heard with just the rim held against the chest
* Grade 6
o Murmur heard with the stethoscope held away and in from the chest wall

Cardiac Murmurs


* Most mid systolic murmurs of grade 2/6 intensity or less are benign
o Associated with physiologic increases in blood velocity:
+ Pregnancy
+ Elderly
* In contrast, the following murmurs are usually pathologic:
o Systolic murmurs grade 3/6 or greater in intensity
o Continuous murmurs
o Any diastolic murmur

Diagnostic Testing
* ECHOCARDIOGRAM
Aortic Stenosis
Progression of Aortic Sclerosis
* Hemodynamic progression usually slow
o Average rate of increase in aortic jet velocity of 0.3 m/s per year
o Increase in mean transaortic gradient of 7 mmHg
o Decrease in AVA of 0.1 cm2 per year
* Severe AS
o Aortic jet velocity > 4 m/s
o Mean transvalvular pressure gradient > 50 mmHg
o AVA < 1.0 cm2

Pathophysiology of Aortic Stenosis
* Obstruction of LV outflow increases intracavitary systolic pressures and leads to LV pressure overload
* Initial compensatory mechanism is myocardial hypertrophy with preservation of systolic function
* Diastolic function impaired as a consequence of increased wall thickness and abnormal myocardial relaxation
* Increased wall stress and afterload causes eventual decrease in ejection fraction

Pseudostenosis
* Occurs in patients with impaired systolic function and aortic stenosis
o Unable to generate transvalvular gradient
* Careful diagnostic testing with dobutamine infusion protocols can aid in differentiating between true AS and pseudostenosis
* If the calculated AVA increases with augmentation of cardiac output, then pseudostenosis present
* If AVA does not increase with dobutamine, then obstruction fixed and true AS present

Clinical Presentation of Aortic Stenosis
* Cardinal symptoms:
o Angina
+ Occurs in >50% of patients, not sensitive due to prevalence of CAD
o Syncope
o CHF
* Sudden cardiac death rare, <1% per year
* In earlier stages, AS presentation more subtle
o Dyspnea
o Decreased exercise tolerance
* Rarely, AS diagnosed in the setting of GI bleeding
o Heyde’s syndrome
+ Bleeding caused by AVM
+ Concurrent AS occurs at prevalence rate of 15-25%
+ Associated with an acquired von Willebrand syndrome due to disruption of vW multimers through a diseased AV

Management of Aortic Stenosis
* Prognosis in asymptomatic disease excellent
* Conservative approach with monitoring for symptoms recommended
* When severe stenosis present-
o 38% of asymptomatic patients develop symptoms within 2 years
o 79% are symptomatic within 3 years
* Once symptoms occur, AVR needed
* LV dysfunction and severe AS have increased perioperative mortality with AVR
o But outcomes still favorable with surgery
* Nitroprusside may transiently improve cardiac function as a bridge to valve replacement
o Does not supplant AVR in symptomatic patients

Aortic Valve Replacement

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Heart Murmurs



Heart Murmurs
By: David Leder

Outline

I. Basic Pathophysiology
II. Describing murmurs
III. Systolic murmurs
IV. Diastolic murmurs
V. Continuous murmurs
VI. Summary

Basic Pathophysiology
Murmurs = Math
Describing a heart murmur

1. Timing
o murmurs are longer than heart sounds
o HS can distinguished by simultaneous palpation of the carotid arterial pulse
o systolic, diastolic, continuous
2. Shape
o crescendo (grows louder), decrescendo, crescendo-decrescendo, plateau

3. Location of maximum intensity
o is determined by the site where the murmur originates
o e.g. A, P, T, M listening areas
4. Radiation
o reflects the intensity of the murmur and the direction of blood flow

5. Intensity
o graded on a 6 point scale
+ Grade 1 = very faint
+ Grade 2 = quiet but heard immediately
+ Grade 3 = moderately loud
+ Grade 4 = loud
+ Grade 5 = heard with stethoscope partly off the chest
+ Grade 6 = no stethoscope needed

*Note: Thrills are assoc. with murmurs of grades 4 - 6

6. Pitch
o high, medium, low
7. Quality
o blowing, harsh, rumbling, and musical
8. Others:
i. Variation with respiration

+ Right sided murmurs change more than left sided

ii. Variation with position of the patient

iii. Variation with special maneuvers

+ Valsalva/Standing => Murmurs decrease in length and intensity

EXCEPT: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and Mitral valve prolapse

Systolic Murmurs
* Derived from increased turbulence associated with:

1. Increased flow across normal SL valve or into a dilated great vessel
2. Flow across an abnormal SL valve or narrowed ventricular outflow tract - e.g. aortic stenosis
3. Flow across an incompetent AV valve - e.g. mitral regurg.
4. Flow across the interventricular septum

Early Systolic murmurs
1. Acute severe mitral regurgitation
2. Congenital, small muscular septal defect
3. Tricuspid regurg. with normal PA pressures

Midsystolic (ejection) murmurs

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Valvular Heart Disease



Valvular Heart Disease

Medical Surgical I
Types
* Mitral Stenosis
* Mitral Regurgitation
* Mitral Valve Prolapse
* Aortic Stenosis
* Aortic regurgitation
* Tricuspid valve is affected infrequently
o Tricuspid stenosis – causes Rt HF
o Tricuspid regurgitation –causes venous overload

Tricuspid Valve
Rheumatic Heart Disease
* Inflammatory process that may affect the myocardium, pericardium and or endocardium
* Usually results in distortion and scarring of the valves
* Subjective symptoms
o Prior history of rheumatic fever
o General malaise
o Pain – may or may not be present
* Objective symptoms
o Temperature
o Murmurs
o Dyspnea
o polyarthritis
* Diagnosis
o H/P
o WBC and ESR
o C-reactive protein
o Cardiac enzymes
o EKG
o Chest x-ray
o Echo
o Cardiac cath
o Cardiac output
* Nursing Care
o Vital signs
o Rest and quiet environment
o Give antibiotics, digitalis, and diuretics
o Provide adequate nutrition
o Monitor I/O
o Explain treatment and home care

Mitral Stenosis
* Usually results from rheumatic carditis
* Is a thickening by fibrosis or calcification
* Can be caused by tumors, calcium and thrombus
* Valve leaflets fuse and become stiff and the cordae tendineae contract
* These narrows the opening and prevents normal blood flow from the LA to the LV
* LA pressure increases, left atrium dilates, PAP increases, and the RV hypertrophies
* Pulmonary congestion and right sided heart failure occurs
* Followed by decreased preload and CO decreases
* Mild – asymptomatic
* With progression – dyspnea, orthopneas, dry cough, hemoptysis, and pulmonary edema may appear as hypertension and congestion progresses
* Right sided heart failure symptoms occur later
* S/S
o Pulse may be normal to A-Fib
o Apical diastolic murmur is heard

Mitral Regurgitation
* Primarily caused by rheumatic heart disease, but may be caused by papillary muscle rupture form congenital, infective endocarditis or ischemic heart disease
* Abnormality prevents the valve from closing
* Blood flows back into the right atrium during systole
* During diastole the regurg output flows into the LV with the normal blood flow and increases the volume into the LV
* Progression is slowly – fatigue, chronic weakness, dyspnea, anxiety, palpitations
* May have A-fib and changes of LV failure
* May develop right sided failure as well

Mitral Valve Prolapse

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