Cardio - Cardiomyopathy Flashcards
What is cardiomyopathy?
A myocardial disorder in which the heart muscle is structurally or functionally abnormal.
With exclusion of:
- Hypertension
- structural or valvular disease
- coronary disease
What are the causes of cardiomyopathy?
- Dilated:
- systolic dysfunction
- dilated ventricles
- reduced stroke volume- familial
- non-familial (idiopathic, post viral, IHD, HTN, alcohol, takotsubo) - Obstructive:
- HOCM (AD inheritance)
- LV diastolic impairment
- obstructive at rest, labile or non-obstructive - Restrictive:
- Diastolic dysfunction
- Primary (idiopathic)
- Secondary (amyloid, sarcoid, HTN, haemochromatosis) - Arrhythmogenic right ventricle:
- associated with increased circulating catecholamines and calcium release of sarcoplasmic reticulum
- may involve ryanodine receptor
- genetic cause - Peripartum:
- risk factors: tocolytic therapy, pre-eclampsia, obesity, advanced age, African origin.
How would you manage a patient with cardiomyopathy?
Resuscitate them using an ABCDE approach correcting abnormalities as they are found.
Specific measures can be divided into pharmacological and non-pharmacological/mechanical
Pharmacological:
i) Reduce LV work
- reduce afterload (ACEi, ARBs, CCBs, spiro, inodilators, nitrates)
- control heart rate (beta blockers, CCBs)
ii) optimise contractility
- beta blockers
- inotropes, inodilators
iii) optimise preloadiv) reduce thrombotic complications
- anticoagulation if EF <30%
Mechanical:
- LVAD
- IABP temporary
- CRT
- ICD
- transplant
- partial left ventriculectomy