Clinical Conditions Flashcards
What heart murmur is heard in aortic stenosis
Systolic
What heart murmur is heard in aortic Regurgitation
Diastolic
What heart murmur is heard in mitral stenosis
Diastolic
What heart murmur is heard in mitral Regurgitation
Systolic
What causes aortic stenosis
Fibrosis, calcification, congenital (bicuspid), rheumatic fever
What causes mitral stenosis
Rheumatic fever or valve fusion
What causes aortic Regurgitation
Aortic root dilation, rheumatic fever
What causes mitral valve be Regurgitation
Weakening of the tissue, MI damaging papillary muscles, rheumatic fever, fibrosis, LV dilation
What can be seen due to a bounding pulse
Quinke’s sign and head bobbing
What happens to the blood viscosity in multiple myeloma and what does this result in
It increases giving slugging in the peripheries as its harder for the heart to pump the blood
Give some examples of acute phase proteins
CRP, complement factors, fibrinogen, ferritin
What are the acyanotic heart defects
PDA, atrial septum defect, ventricular septum defect, coarctation of the aorta
What is coarctation of the aorta
Narrowing of the aorta
What is PDA
Patent ductus arteriosus - hen the ductus arteriosus doesn’t close so blood flows from the aorta to the pulmonary artery
What does atrial septum defect result in
An increase in blood flow to the RA giving right heart failure due to pulmonary hypertension
What is the most common heart defect
Ventricular septum defect
What are the cyanotic heart defects
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome, transposition of the great arteries, tetralogy of fallot, tricuspid atresia and pulmonary atresia
What is hypoplastic left heart syndrome
Underdevelopment of the left side of the heart
Why is transposition of the great arteries not fatal during pregnancy
As the shunts mean that oxygenated blood is still circulated around the body
What are the 4 features of tetralogy of fallot
Overriding aorta, pulmonary artery stenosis, ventricular septum defect and RV hypertrophy
What is tricuspid atresia
When there no passage between RA and RV so the RV is underdeveloped
What is pulmonary atresia
No RV outlet so blood flow back through the RA to LA
How does the electrical activity of ventricular myocytes change in hyperkalaemia
The membrane potential is more positive, this inactivates more sodium Channels so there is also a slower upstroke
What is used to treat hyperkalaemia
Calcium gluconate with glucose
How does the electrical activity of ventricular myocytes change with hypokalaemia
The action potential lengthens giving delayed depolarisations
What type of drug is propranolol
Beta blocker
What drugs are used in hypertension
ACE inhibitors, calcium blockers, beta blockers, alpha blockers, diuretics
What blood pressure is classed as hypertension
140/90
What is essential hypertension
An unknown causes for the rise in bp
What is secondary hypertension
When there is a known cause for hypertension e.g. Renovascular disease, conn’s syndrome, Cushing’s syndrome, phaechromocytoma
What causes cardiogenic shock
MI, arrthymias, heart failure
What is cardiogenic shock
When the ventricles cant empty properly
What is mechanical shock
Where the ventricles cant fill properly
What causes mechanical shock
PE, cardiac tamponande
What is distributive shock
Excessive vasodilation causing a fall in TPR
What causes distributive shock
Anaphylactic shock or septic shock
What is hypovoleamic shock
Where there is reduced blood volume so a lower CO
What causes hypovoleamic shoc k
Haemorrhage, burns, vomiting, diarrhoea
How long should the PR interval be
0.12 - 0.2 seconds
How long should the QRS complex be
0.12 seconds
What does a long QT interval mean
The ventricles are taking longer to repolarise
What does a longer QRS complex mean
The ventricles are taking longer to depolarise - so the normal depolarisation route (His - Purkinjie system) may not being used
What is sinus rhythm
Where every p wave is followed by a QRS complex, with a normal heart rate
How is first degree heart block seen
Prolonged PR interval
How is second degree heart block (Mobitz type 1) seen
Increasing prolonged PR interval until a QRS complex is suddenly dropped
How does second degree heart block (Mobitz type 2) present on an ECG
Normal PR interval with a QRS complex suddenly dropped
How is third degree heart block seen on an ECG
No coordinated contractions of the atria and ventricles. Usually shows a wider QRS complex as the ventricular escape rhythm takes
What is heart block
Slower/failure of conduction between the atria and ventricles via the AVN