Cardiac Hx and physical exam + Heart sound simulation Flashcards
True symptom of CHD
Angina pectoris:
• Supply-demand mismatch in the coronary arteries leads to hypoxia in the myocardium that causes pain.
• Distribution of pain:
○ Chest, left arm, sometimes neck.
○ Also can be R side, jaw, epigastric, or between scapulae
Levine’s Sign
- pathopnemonic sign
○ Point to sternum
Tips:
• Examine patient from R side
Tx for angina pectoris (CHD)
Nitroglycerin works because it vasodilates and increases perfusion.
Syncope
• Refers to transient loss in consciousness
Tips:
• Examine patient from R side
Properly checking Orthostatic Hypotension:
• After patient has been lying for 5 min, check bp and pulse. Have patient stand up and repeat measurements
○ Orthostatic hypotension = 20 mmHg drop in systolic BP upon standing
Why BP different in each arm for Orthostatic Hypotension?
○ Blood flow different to each arm due to different vessels.
○ Stenosis of arteries coming off of branches.
Coarctation of the aorta:
physical findings
- If the BP is high in both arms, then determine if the BP is lower in the extremities
- Apply BP cuff to the leg and listen to dorsalis pedis or posterior tibial pulse
—>• Lower BP in the leg raises suspicion for coarctation!!
What would you suspect if you can feel Point of maximal impact (PMI)
LBBB (recall that it is a conduction abnormality)
Murmur type:
- systolic ejection
- pansystolic
- late systolic
- early systolic
- mid-late diastolic
- systolic ejection:
- aortic stenosis
- pulmonic stenosis - pansystolic
- mitral and tricuspid regurg - late systolic
- mitral valve prolapse - early diasystolic
- aortic and pulmonic regurg - mid-late diastolic
- mitral stenosis
MS ARD
MR ASS