1/ Ischaemic Heart Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What questions need to be asked in a chest pain history?

A
  • its location quality , the relationship with food, breathing and exercise
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2
Q

What are the broad DDx for chest pain?

A
  • cardiac, msk, oesophagitic/hiatus hernia, PE, dissecting aortic aneurysm
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3
Q

What are the cardiac risk factors?

A
age and male gender 
FHx 
diabetes 
blood pressure 
hyperlipidaemia 
smoking 
BMI and exercise
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4
Q

What are the 5 normal layers if a muscular artery?

A
intima 
internal elastic lamina 
media 
external elastic lamina 
adventitia
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5
Q

Describe the appearance of atherosclerosis under microscopy

A

eccentric intimal expansion made up of connective tissue and lipid causing narrowing of the lumen
–> has a lipid core

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6
Q

Which cells are involved in the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis?

A

Damaged endothelial cells and activated white cells/macrophages

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7
Q

Describe the two process occurring in endothelial dysfuncton in atherosclerosis

A

Process A
- there is increased permeability allowing access of molecules through the endothelium
Process B
- endothelial cells show an increased expression of adhesion molecules
- white cells adhere to endothelium
- white cells migrate thought the intima, release cytokines attracting yet more cells and leading to the accumulation of lipid

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8
Q

Describe the endothelial response to injury

A
  • the endothelium is damaged by dyslipidaemia. Particularly oxidised LDL and toxins related to cigarette smoking, also shear stress
  • this leads to increased permeability - to lipoproteins, oxidised LDLs, and increased expression of adhesion molecules, leucocytes migrate into the intima and release cytokines, transform into foamy macrophages, smooth muscle cells are recruited
  • cytokines self perpetuate the process
  • vessels grow into the plaque and a fibrous cap is formed
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9
Q

What is a fatty streak?

A
  • the earliest lesion of atherosclerosis where lipid has accumulated in the intima
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10
Q

What happens to blood vessel size as atherosclerosis increases?

A

positive remodelling

- early plaque accumulation is associated with compensatory enlargement of vessel size

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11
Q

What is the fibrous cap made of?

A

collagen

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12
Q

When angina becomes present at rest, what is this called?

What does this mean about the plaque?

A

Unstable angina

- the plaque is ‘complicated’, disrupted and thrombogenic

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13
Q

Describe the process of unstable angina

A
  • the plaque becomes ulcerated and then ruptures allowing the escape of thrombogenic material
  • the fibrous cap becomes thinned - proteolytic enzymes from macrophages mediate this
  • new vessels in the unstable plaque can rupture
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14
Q

Which artery has occluded in a posterior infarct?
Which artery has occluded in an anterior infarct?
Which artery has occluded in a lateral infarct?

A
  • right coronary artery
  • LAD
  • left circumflex artery
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15
Q

Describe the difference in appearance between normal heart muscles and heart muscle after an infarct

A
  • necrotic fibres become vacuolated and eventually lose their nuclei
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16
Q

What processes follow necrosis?

A
  • healing and repair

- dead tissue is removed and replaced by fibrous scar which would not function in the same way as viable myocardium

17
Q

What are the acute complications of MI?

A

heart failure
frank cardiogenic shock
arrhythmias

18
Q

What are the sub-acute complications of MI?

A
  • thromboembolism both from mural thrombus in the heart and an increased tendency for DVT
  • pericarditis with transmural infarcts
  • rupture either of the cardiac wall or of a papillary muscle leading to valve dysfunction
19
Q

What are the chronic complications of MI?

A
  • heart failure
  • ventricular aneurysm +/- thrombus
    recurrent angina
    infarction
20
Q

What features are seen post MI at Post mortem?

A
  • yellow areas of necrosis with a brown/red hyperaemic rim
  • necrosis only visible after 24 hours
  • involvement of the pericardial surface can cause pericarditis
21
Q

What does scarring look like?

A
  • a white fibrous scar

- can lead to chronic heart failure