Cardiac Emergencies Lecture Flashcards
describe the etiology of acute aortic stenosis
Degeneration of valve in older population, congenital in younger
L ventricular outflow obstruction - fixed cardiac output - increased afterload - LVH - HF
Describe the etiology of a 3rd degree AV block
AV dissociation (P waves not related to QRS) decreasing cardiac output
Can result from MI, cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, endocarditis, hyperkalemia, medications, post-cardiac surgery, post-catheter ablation
RF: lyme history, maternal lupus, sarcoidosis
Describe the etiology of WPW
Accessory AV pathway most frequent left lateral and posterolateral in bundle of kent
Pre-excites ventricles leading to a slurred QRS
Describe the etiology/RF for acute MI
Describe the etiology of myocarditis
Inflammation of the heart muscle (most commonly viral - coxsackie B)
Peaks in infancy & adolescence
Bacterial (rickettsia, borrelia), fungal, scorpion, SLE, rheumatic fever, clozapine
Describe the etiology/RF for cardiac tamponade
Pericardial effusion causing significant pressure on the heart
Marked reduction in diastolic filling & cardiac output
RF: malignancy, uremia, pericarditis, infection, connective tissue disease, trauma
Describe the etiology of kawasaki syndrome
M>F, common in asian american kids, rare in adults, unknown cause
Cards impact: coronary artery aneurysm, depressed myocardial contractility, HF, MI, arrhythmias, peripheral artery occlusion, involves medium-sized muscular arteries
Describe the etiology of endocarditis
Infection of endothelium/valves d/t colonization during bacteremia (MC mitral valve, tricuspid in IVDU)
Often staph in acute, strep viridans in sub-acute