Aortic Stenosis Flashcards
1
Q
What is aortic stenosis?
A
-Narrowing of the aorta, it can occur above, below or at aortic valve
2
Q
What are the structural abnormalities of aortic stenosis?
A
- the aortic valve may be bicuspid over tricuspid from birth
- the valve becomes calcified and narrows
3
Q
What are the physiological abnormalities?
A
- left ventricular hypertrophy as more force has to be generated to eject blood through the aortic valve
- this causes a pressure overload
4
Q
How does aortic stenosis present?
A
- Frequently male patients over 65
- no symptoms for many years
5
Q
Experienced symptoms and clinical signs
A
- angina chest pain
- breathlessness with exercise
- light-headedness with exercise
- loud “ejection systolic” heart murmur at aortic valve
- reduced pulse pressure (difference of 20mmHg instead of 50mmHg between systolic and diastolic blood pressure)
- forceful apex beat
6
Q
Abnormal test results
A
- QRS on ECG (evidence of more muscular left ventricle)
- narrowed aortic valve and hypertrophied left ventricle shown on echocardiogram
7
Q
Medical/surgical intervention
A
- only observation if pressure between left ventricle and aorta is below 6mmHg
- surgery is left ventricle begins to dilate
- aortic valve replacement
- surgical valves made or metal and plastic or pig valves
8
Q
Primary and secondary prevention
A
-patients with artificial valves require life-long treatment with warfarin (anticoagulant treatment), patients with tissue valves don’t require warfarin