Cardio Flashcards
List the possible causes of HTN
- Essential HTN
- Malignant or accelerate phase HTN (visual disturbance, headaches, retinal haemorrhages)
- Secondary HTN
- Diabetic nephropathy
- Polycystic kidney disease
- Renovascular disease
- Conn’s syndrome
- Phaeochromcytoma
- Acromegaly - Drugs
- Steroids
- OCP
- NSAIDS - Pregnancy
Treatment of HTN
Refer to flow for targets
- Lifestyle advice
- weight reduction
- low salt diet
- reduce alcohol
- increase exercise
- stop smoking - Pharmacological management
Step 1 if under 55 and not afro Caribbean
-ACEi or ARB
- if yes CCB
Step two
- + thiazide diuretic/ CCB/ ACEi or ARB
Step three
- All three of the above combined
Step four
SEEK expert advice is not controlled on four drugs at optimal doses.
- low-dose spironolactone4 if blood potassium level is ≤4.5 mmol/l
- alpha-blocker or beta-blocker if blood potassium level is >4.5 mmol/l
Pharmacology of ACEi
Prevent the conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II.
- Angiotensin II = vasoconstrictor
- Reduces vascular resistance
- Dilate the efferent glomerular arteriole
DOSE start @ 1.25mg in heart failure start @ 2.5mg normal people U&E's two weeks after starting Take at bed
Side effects of ACEi
Hypotension
Dry cough
Hyperkalameia due to lower aldosterone levels = potassium retention
Pharmacology of ARBs
Block the action of angiotensin II on the AT1 receptor
Dose Losartan is common choice 12.5mg in heart failure 50mg in other indications First dose before bed
Pharmacology of CCB
Decrease Ca2t entry into the vascular and cardiac cells
Relaxation and vasodilation of the arterial smooth muscle
Reduce myocardial oxygen demand by reducing cardiac cells contractility
DOSE
Hypertension: 5-10mg daily (amlodipine)
Angina: 90mg (diltiazem- non dihydropyridine)
SVT: Verapamil 40-120mg
Side effects of CCB
Ankle swelling
Flushing
Headache
Palpations
Pharmacology of thiazides
Inhibit the Na+/Cl- co transporter in the DCT of the nephron
Prevents reabsorption of sodium
Fall in extracellular volume
DOSE
Bendro and Indapmide = 2.5mg daily
Side effects of thiazides and thiazide like
Hyponatraemia
Hypokalaemia
Impotence in men
Pharmacology of Spirolactone
Aldosterone antagonist
Competitively bind to the aldosterone receptor
Increases sodium and water exception through preventing activation of the ENAc channels
Dose
100mg daily
Side effects of spirolactone
Hyperkalamia
Gynaecomastia
Define acute coronary syndrome
Unstable angina + evolving MI
Path: plaque rupture, thrombosis and inflammation
Risk factors of ACS
Modifiable
- HTN
- DM
- Smoking
- High cholesterol
- Obesity
Non-Modifiable
- Age
- Male
- FH (< 55yrs )
IX in suspected ACS
Bloods - Troponin T/I ( Present from 6hrs, repeated every 6hrs) - FBC - U+Es - Glucose - Lipids and clotting ECG CXR - Cardiomegaly - Pulmonary oedema - Aortic rupture
Complication of MI
Death Pump Failure Pericarditis Rupture - Cardiac tamponade ( Becks triad of low BP, high JVP and muffled heart sounds) - Papillary muscle rupture ( Pulmonary oedema) - Arrhythmias - Ventricular aneurysm Embolism - Dresslers syndrome
Define Dresslers Syndrome
Auto antibodies avs the myocyte sarcolemma
Present 2-6 wks with recurrent pericarditis
Fever
Anaemia
High ESR
Rx: NSAIDS or steroids
Classification of angina
Stable: induced by effort
Unstable: occurs at rest, evolving MI
Decubitus: occurs lying down
Syndrome X: angina + ST elevation on exercise test no evidence of atheroscelorsis, small vessel disease
Ix for chest pain
Bloods ECG ( usually normal, may show - ST depression - Flat inverted t waves - Past MI Stress ECHO Perfusion scan Angiography ( Gold standard)
Treatment for angina
- Lifestyle
- Stop smoking
- Wt loss and exercise
- Healthy diet - Medical ( 2nd prevention)
- Aspirin 75mg
- ACEi
- Statins ( simavastatin 40mg)
- Control HTN
Anti anginals for episodes
- GTN spray + either
a) B blocker (atenolol 50-100mg)
b) CCb verapamil 80mg - ISMN 20-40mg BD
- Interventional
- PCI
if high risk of re stenosis give clopidogrel or use drug electing stent - Surgical CABG
- If L main stem disease or triple vessel disease
Pathophysiology of Heart failure
- Reduced cardiac output
- Compensation
- Frank starling
- RAS and ANP/BNP release - Progressive decline in CO
- impaired contractility and functional valve regurgitation
- hypertrophy and myocardial ischaemia
- RAS activation with NA+ and fluid retention, increase venous pressure, oedema
Types of heart failure
Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF): defined as heart failure with an ejection fraction less than 40%.
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Usually relaxation rather than contraction of the left ventricle is affected, and ejection fraction is normal or at least above 40%.
Causes:
- IHD
- Cardiomyopathy
- HTN
- Mitral and aortic valve disease
Clinical features:
- Fatigue
- Dyspnoea
- Nocturnal cough with pink frothy sputum
- Weight loss
- Displaced apex beat
- Gallop rhythm ( 3rd heart sounds)
- Bibasal creps
Causes:
- LVF
- Cor pulmonale
- Tricuspid and pulmonary valve disease
Clinical features:
- Anorexia
- Nausea
- Increase JVP
- Hepatomegaly
- Pitting oedema
- Ascites
Classification of Congestive cardiac failure
New York Classification of Heart Failure
I: Heart disease present but no undue dyspnoea from ordinary activities
II: Comfortable at rest; dyspnoea on ordinary activities
III: Less than ordinary activities cause dyspnoea that is limiting
IV: Dyspnoea present at rest; all activities cause discomfort
Discuss the relation between CCF and BNP
BNP: B-type natriuretic peptide Secreted from the ventricles in response to - Increase in pressure - Tachycardia - Glucocorticoids - Thyroid hormones
Action
- Increase GFR and decrease renal NA reabsorption
- Reduced preload by reducing the smooth muscles
Marker of heart failure
BNP > 100 bad sign
Correlates with LV dysfunction