Chapter 44 - myocardial contusion Flashcards

1
Q

Arrhythmias associated with myocardial injury may be delayed how long?

A

48 hours

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2
Q

In humans, myocardial injury is associated with poorer patient outcomes, increased expense associated with testing, monitoring and prolonged hospitalisation. T/F

A

F - no effect on patient outcome

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3
Q

Gold standard for diagnosing myocardial injury?

A

Direct visualisation, histopathology

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4
Q

Incidence of myocardial injury in humans and dogs?

A

8-95%; 10-96%

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5
Q

Two proposed mechanisms of myocardial injury?

A
  1. Elastic thoracic wall –> transmission of compressive & concussive forces from forceful contact with ribs, sternum, vertebrae w/ acceleration/ deceleration (most commonly due to lateral compression)
  2. distortion of thoracic cage increases intrathoracic & intracardiac pressures –> shearing stress within myocardium resulting in contusions
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6
Q

In vivo studies in dogs to mimic blunt chest trauma showed trauma to which cardiac anatomic locations with left and right sided trauma respectively?

A

Left: craniolateral wall of left ventricle
Right: septal & right ventricular wall

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7
Q

Describe one proposed pro arrhythmic mechanism of myoctyte trauma.

A
  1. lowering of the ratio of effective refractory period to action potential duration & increased resting membrane potential (less negative)
  2. alterations in Na+ & Ca2+ currents across cell membranes, increased intracellular Ca2+ availability, increased sensitivity to depolarisation
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8
Q

Other common pathophysiology of arrhythmias in trauma patients?

A

hypoxia, anemia, metaboic acidosis, electrolyte imbalances, intracranial injuries, catecholamine release (all lead to alterations in membrane transport and permeability to cations –> decreased resting membrane potential)

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9
Q

Myocardial injury should be suspected in traumatized dogs with which 4 concurrent injuries?

A
  1. orthopedic (fractured extremities, spine, pelvis)
  2. external evidence of chest wall trauma
  3. radiographic evidence of chest wall trauma (contusions, pneumothorax, hemothroax, diaphragmatic rupture, rib/scapular F#)
  4. neurologic injury
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10
Q

Echocardiographic features of myocardial injury in dogs?

A
  1. increased end-diastolic wall thickness
  2. impaired contractility, indicated by wall motion abnormalities and decreased fractional shortening
  3. increased echogenicity
  4. localised areas of echo lucency consistent with intramural hematomas
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11
Q

Cardiac troponin T & I are detectable at increased levels within how long of injury? How long to they remain elevated?

A

4-6 hours, up to 7 days

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12
Q

Most sensitive single indicator of injury?

A

cTnI

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13
Q

negative predictive value of normal cTnI + normal ECG on arrival in human trauma patients?

A

100%

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14
Q

Anti arrhythmic therapy should be considered when the which criteria have been met?

A

When properly stabilised patients develop multiform VPCs, sustained V tach (140-180bpm), R-on-T esp when clinical evidence of decreased CO (hypotension, weakness, pale MM, delayed CRT, syncope, collapse)

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15
Q

Maximum suggested cumulative dose of lidocaine boluses? Associated side effects?

A

8mg/kg, vomiting, seizures

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16
Q

Second line anti arrhythmic? Vaughan Williams classification? Side effects?

A

Procainamide? 1a, hypotension, AV block

17
Q

B-blockers should be considered under which circumstances?

A
  1. ventricular ectopy persistent in spite of analgesia, treatment for shock
  2. ventricular ectopy persistent in spite of treatment with class 1 anti arrhythmics
  3. animals that are receiving positive inotropes
  4. 1 + 2
18
Q

Anaesthetic agents with increased likelihood of inducing arrhythmias include:

A

halothane
atropine
thiobarbiturates