Cardiopulmonary Extra Questions Flashcards
The following data were obtained from a patient:
- Mean right atrial pressure = 16 mm Hg
- Right ventricular pressure = 20/3 mm Hg
What is the valve dysfunction? Describe the patient’s heart murmur.
Right atrial pressure is higher than normal, yet right ventricular end diastolic pressure is still normal. This indicates that there is a high resistance to blood flow through the tricuspid valve (tricuspid stenosis). You would expect to hear a presystolic murmur occurring at the time of atrial contraction. In addition, there will be a diastolic decrescendo murmur during the rapid ventricular filling phase (upon mitral valve opening).
The normal ranges for systolic/diastolic pulmonary artery pressures are ___/___?
Pulmonary artery systolic pressure = 15 - 30 mm Hg; pulmonary artery diastolic pressure = 4 - 12 mm Hg.
A patient has a systolic crescendo-decrescendo murmur and a brachial artery pressure of 110/90 mm Hg. The QRS complex in Lead III has a large negative deflection while there is no net deflection in lead aVR.
What is the valve dysfunction? The patient’s mean electrical axis is?
Aortic stenosis. The patient’s mean electrical axis is minus 60 degrees.
A patient has a left bundle branch block. How would this person’s lead I QRS complex differ from normal?
Ventricular depolarization would occur rapidly in the right ventricle since the wave of depolarization can rapidly spread through the right bundle branch as under normal conditions. The right ventricle would depolarize before the left since the wave of depolarization would move slowly through the left ventricle (due to the left bundle branch block). The time to depolarize the both ventricles would be increased, resulting in a wide QRS complex. The QRS complex will be notched, which is indicative of a bundle branch block.
The following data were obtained in a 65 kg patient: LV EDV = 200 ml, LV ESV = 140 ml, and heart rate = 50 beats/min. Calculate the patient’s stroke volume, ejection fraction, and cardiac output. Which of these values are abnormal?
Increasing the heart rate from 40 to 160 beats per minute alone does not increase cardiac output by a factor of 4. Why?
Increasing the heart rate decreases the duration of diastole, which results in less filling time. As a result, end-diastolic volume will be reduced and stroke volume will decrease (Starling’s law). In addition, there will be a decrease in the duration of systole, resulting in less time for ejection.
The mean right atrial pressure in a patient at rest is 2 mm Hg. Is this normal, high or low?
Normal (normal range for right atrial pressure is 0 - 8 mm Hg).
A patient has an arterial blood pressure of 175/60 mm Hg. Murmurs are evident during ventricular diastole. What is the valve dysfunction? What would be the net deflection (positive, negative) in lead aVF in this patient?
Aortic insufficiency. The chronic increase in left ventricular volume would result in left ventricular hypertrophy, which would be seen as left axis deviation and a net negative QRS complex in aVF.
What is the physiological significance of the low capillary blood flow velocity?
The low capillary blood flow velocity increases the time available for diffusion of solutes between tissue and blood.
A 1% albumin solution would have an osmotic pressure _____ that of a 1% NaCl solution.
Both of these solutions would contain 10 g of solute per liter. The high molecular weight of albumin compared to NaCl would cause the osmolality (and therefore osmotic pressure) of the albumin solution to be less than that of the NaCl solution.
A patient develops an ectopic pacemaker in the left atrium. How will the P wave and QRS complex in lead I compare to normal?
The patient will have a negative P wave in lead I because the wave of atrial depolarization will be moving from left to right (toward the negative end of lead I). The QRS complex will be normal in lead I since the conduction pathway responsible for ventricular depolarization (i.e., AV
The mean electrical axis is - 45 degrees, which is consistent with left ventricular hypertrophy. D.V.’s heart rate is 75 beats per minute.
During inspiration, the venous return to the right ventricle is (increased, decreased, unchanged), which results in the force of contraction of the right ventricle being (increased, decreased, unchanged), and in turn causes a(n) (increased, decreased, unchanged) stroke volume.
Increased, Increased, Increased
The addition of approximately ____ millosmoles of solute would be required to increase a person’s osmolality from 290 to 310 if the person weighed 100 kg and had a body fat of 15%?
First calculate the total body water:
Total water = 0.85 x 100 x 0.72 = 61.2 liters.
Total solute needed = concentration increase x total water = (20 mosm/liter) x 61.2 liters = 1224 milliosmoles
A patient has a diastolic murmur as well as a loud pre-systolic crescendo murmur. Describe the valve dysfunction(s).
Tricuspid or mitral stenosis
The following data were obtained from a patient:
- Mean left atrial pressure = 20 mm Hg
- Left ventricular end diastolic pressure = 6 mm Hg
What is the valve dysfunction? Characterize the heart murmur in this patient.
The left ventricular end diastolic pressure is within normal values. The large diastolic pressure difference between the left atrium and left ventricle is characteristic of mitral stenosis. The murmur would be the same as that described in question #6.
Left ventricular systole occurs between which heart sounds?
Left ventricular systole is defined as being from the onset of S1 to the onset of S2.
How would systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure change during inspiration?
During inspiration, blood is pooled in pulmonary veins because the lower intrathoracic pressure expands the veins. As a result, end diastolic volume in the left ventricle is reduced, resulting in a decreased stroke volume, and therefore lower arterial systolic and pulse pressures.
The renal blood flow of a patient’s right kidney = 300 ml/min. Renal artery and renal vein pressures are 95 and 10 mm Hg. Calculate vascular resistance in the right kidney.
Renal Vascular Resistance
= (95-10)/(300/60) = 17 mm Hg/ml/sec.
Multiply by 1330 to get answer in dyne sec/cm5.
You plan to expand the plasma volume of a patient by 0.5 liters using IV administration of isotonic saline. The patient weighs 200 lbs and has 17% body fat. You would have to give _____ liters to accomplish this assuming no loss of fluid occurred via the kidneys, GI tract, lungs or skin.
The patient’s weight and percent body fat are not relevant to answer this question. The isotonic saline would stay in the ECF. Since plasma constitutes about one-fourth of the ECF volume you would need 2 liters of isotonic saline to accomplish a 0.5 liter increase in plasma volume.
What is the physiological significance of the large capillary surface area?
Although the radius and length of each capillary are small, the large number of capillaries results in the blood flow per capillary being very low. As a result, the capillary surface area in relation to the flow is large. Since the rate of diffusion is directly proportional to the surface area, the large surface area facilitates the exchange of solutes between tissue and blood.
A patient has a diastolic decrescendo murmur. The patient’s left ventricular pressure (systolic/diastolic) is 135/8 mm Hg and aortic blood pressure is 135/45 mm Hg. What is the valve dysfunction?
Aortic insufficiency
A patient in a nursing home has a nutritional imbalance that causes her to loose both water and solute in excess to intake for a period of 3 days. Her solute loss amounts to 145 mosmoles per day while her water loss amounts to 200 ml per day. Assume this person weighed 100 lbs before these losses occurred and had 17% body fat.
- After 3 days of nutritional imbalance this person’s total body water would be approximately_____ liters?
- After 3 days of nutritional imbalance, this person’s body fluid osmolality would be approximately ______ milliosmoles/liter?
- After the 3 days of nutritional imbalance you would expect this patient’s ratio of ICF to total body water to be _______ that before the nutritional imbalance?
- Total water = Initial body water - water loss after 3 days
Initial water = (100 / 2.2) x 0.83 x 0.72 = 27.16 liters
Water loss = 0.2 liters/day x 3 days = 0.6 liters
New water = 27.16 - 0.6 = 26.56 liters
- New mosmolality = (intital mosmoles - mosmoles loss after 3 days) / new water
Inital osmoles = 290 mosmoles/liter x 27.16 liters = 786.4
mosmoles loss = 145 mosmoles/day x 3 days = 435 mosmoles
New mosmolality = (7876-435) / 26.56 liters = 280.17 = 280 mosmoles/liter
- This person lost solute in excess of water. Accordingly, this constitutes a case of hypotonic contraction in which the ECF contracts and the ICF expands. The shift of water from ECF to ICF would cause the ratio of ICF to total water to increase.
A person weighing 55 lbs bets his friend that he can drink 3 liters of water. He rapidly consumes the water and collects the bet. Assume this person has 15% body fat. Answer the following 3 questions assuming this water is absorbed into the body but none is lost via the kidneys, GI tract, lungs, or skin.
What would this cause the persons total body water to increase by?
How would this increase the ECF?
How would this increase the ICF?
- Total body water would increase by 3 liters since no fluid was lost.
- ECF volume would increase by one-third of the ingested volume since the water would distribute between ECF and ICF in the ratio 1 to 2. Accordingly, ECF volume would increase by 1 liter.
- ICF volume would increase by two-thirds of the ingested volume since the water would distribute between ECF and ICF in the ratio 1 to 2. Accordingly, ICF volume would increase by 2 liters.
In a normal person aortic blood pressure:
- is approximately______ mm Hg at the onset of left ventricular ejection.
- is approximately ____ mm Hg at the time of peak left ventricular systolic pressure.
- is approximately ____mm Hg at the onset of the second heart sound.
- 80 mm Hg. Ejection begins when ventricular pressure exceeds aortic pressure. At this time, aortic pressure is at its lowest pressure (diastolic pressure).
- 120 mm Hg. Because the aortic valve normally offers low resistance to blood flow during ejection, peak systolic pressure and peak aortic pressure are nearly the same (~120 mm Hg).
- 100 mm Hg. S2 represents closure of the aortic valve which occurs at ~100 mm Hg.
Using the ventricular depolarization vector cardiogram shown above, sketch the QRS complex for lead aVF. The mean electrical axis is approximately _______ degrees, which is consistent with ___________________.
The mean electrical axis is approximately -45 to -55 degrees, which is consistent with left ventricular hypertrophy.
For a given body weight, an increase in percent body fat would cause plasma volume as percent of body weight to ________?
Total body water decreases as percent body fat increases. Since plasma volume as a fraction of total water remains constant, plasma volume as percent body weight must decrease.