Case 4 - Murmurs Flashcards
1
Q
Clinical features of aortic stenosis
A
- Ejection systolic cresendo decresendo murmur
- Radiates to carotid
- Thrill palpation of aortic area
- Slow rising carotid pulse
- Narrow pulse pressure
- Exertional syncope
2
Q
Commonest differentials for systolic murmur
A
- Aortic stenosis
- Mitral regurgitation
- Tricusipid regurgitation
- Pulmonary stenosis
3
Q
Investigations for murmur
A
- Echocardiogram
- ECG
- CXR - calcified aorta? LVH?
4
Q
Commonest complications of severe aortic stenosis
A
- Heart failure
- LVH
- Arrhytmias eg AF
- Syncope
- Angina
- Cardiogenic shock
- Death - sudden
5
Q
Management aortic stenosis
A
- Valve replacement - open heart or TAVI (transcatheter aortic valve replacement via femoral artery)
- When symptomatic/LV dysfunction
6
Q
Common causes of valvular disease
A
- Senile calcification
- Congenital
- Rheumatic fever
- Cardiomyopathy
- Previous MI
- IE
7
Q
Clinical signs of aortic regurgitation
A
- Collapsing ‘water hammer’ pulse
- Wide pulse pressure
- High pitched, early diastolic murmur (heard best sitting forward on expiration)
- Displaced apex beat
8
Q
Weird signs of aortic regurgitation
A
- Corrigans sign - carotid pulsation dances, rapid rise and fall
- De Musset sign - head nod with pulse
- Quinckes sign - capillary pulsation in nailbed
9
Q
Clinical signs of mitral stenosis?
A
- Malar flush
- Low volume pulse
- AF common
- Tapping, non displaced apex
- Mid-diastolic murmur (best heard on expiration, rolled to left)
10
Q
Clinical signs of mitral regurgitation
A
- AF
- Displaced apex
- RV heave
- Soft S1, split S2 loud P2
- Pansystolic murmur at apex radiating to axilla
11
Q
Signs to look for in infective endocarditis
A
- Signs of IV drug use
- Janeway lesions (palms and soles, flat)
- Oslers nodes (raised)
- Splinter haemorrhages
- Roth spots
- Any new murmur/changed
- Splenomegaly
- Clubbing
- Petechiae
12
Q
Common pathogens causing infective endocarditis
A
- Streptococcus viridans
- Enterococci
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
13
Q
How to definitively diagnose IE?
A
- Transoesophageal echocardiagram usually needed
- Can sometimes see vegetations on TT echo but not always
- Blood cultures - 3x samples over 30-60 mins
- Duke criteria - major+3 minor or 5 minor
14
Q
Initial abx therapy for IE
A
- IV amoxicillin +/- gentamicin
- Vancomycin + gentamicin if penicillin allergic or severe
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15
Q
A