Chapter 44 - myocardial contusion Flashcards
Arrhythmias associated with myocardial injury may be delayed how long?
48 hours
In humans, myocardial injury is associated with poorer patient outcomes, increased expense associated with testing, monitoring and prolonged hospitalisation. T/F
F - no effect on patient outcome
Gold standard for diagnosing myocardial injury?
Direct visualisation, histopathology
Incidence of myocardial injury in humans and dogs?
8-95%; 10-96%
Two proposed mechanisms of myocardial injury?
- Elastic thoracic wall –> transmission of compressive & concussive forces from forceful contact with ribs, sternum, vertebrae w/ acceleration/ deceleration (most commonly due to lateral compression)
- distortion of thoracic cage increases intrathoracic & intracardiac pressures –> shearing stress within myocardium resulting in contusions
In vivo studies in dogs to mimic blunt chest trauma showed trauma to which cardiac anatomic locations with left and right sided trauma respectively?
Left: craniolateral wall of left ventricle
Right: septal & right ventricular wall
Describe one proposed pro arrhythmic mechanism of myoctyte trauma.
- lowering of the ratio of effective refractory period to action potential duration & increased resting membrane potential (less negative)
- alterations in Na+ & Ca2+ currents across cell membranes, increased intracellular Ca2+ availability, increased sensitivity to depolarisation
Other common pathophysiology of arrhythmias in trauma patients?
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)
Myocardial injury should be suspected in traumatized dogs with which 4 concurrent injuries?
- orthopedic (fractured extremities, spine, pelvis)
- external evidence of chest wall trauma
- radiographic evidence of chest wall trauma (contusions, pneumothorax, hemothroax, diaphragmatic rupture, rib/scapular F#)
- neurologic injury
Echocardiographic features of myocardial injury in dogs?
- increased end-diastolic wall thickness
- impaired contractility, indicated by wall motion abnormalities and decreased fractional shortening
- increased echogenicity
- localised areas of echo lucency consistent with intramural hematomas
Cardiac troponin T & I are detectable at increased levels within how long of injury? How long to they remain elevated?
4-6 hours, up to 7 days
Most sensitive single indicator of injury?
cTnI
negative predictive value of normal cTnI + normal ECG on arrival in human trauma patients?
100%
Anti arrhythmic therapy should be considered when the which criteria have been met?
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)
Maximum suggested cumulative dose of lidocaine boluses? Associated side effects?
8mg/kg, vomiting, seizures