CV exam Flashcards
Hand inspection
Splinter haemorrhages: Infective endocarditis
Clubbing: Congenital cyanotic heart disease, late infective endocarditis
Capillary return: Within 2 seconds, dehydration or peripheral vascular disease
Peripheral cyanosis: Not reliable, central more important
Nicotine staining
Asterixis: CO2 retention
Radial pulse assessment
Bradycardia: B blockers, hypothyroidism, heart block, being fit!
Tachycardia: Anxiety, exercise, pyrexia, hyperthyroidism, B2-agonist, arrhythmia, hypovolaemic shock
Rhythm: Heart speeds up in inspiration and slows in expiration (sinus arrhythmia, noticeable -40)
Irregularly irregular: AF, ventricular ectopic beats (disappear on exercise)
Regularly irregular: 2nd degree heart block
Pulse deficit: Measured in AF, difference between the HR and the pulse rate
Palpate both pulses: Aortic dissection, proximal artery disease of axillary artery (can occur after angiography)
Radio-femoral delay: Co-arctation of aorta, say you’d check if there was hypertension and murmur over left sternal edge/ scapula
Collapsing pulse: Aortic regurgitation
Face inspection
Malar flush: Mitral stenosis (dilation of cheek capillaries secondary to pulmonary hypertension)
Xanthelasma and corneal arcus: hyperlipidaemia (under 50 in corneal arcus)
Anaemia
Central cyanosis: pulmonary oedema (ischemia, MI, heart failure, valve defects)
Dental hygiene: Common route for bacterial endocarditis
Carotid pulse examination
Pulse character: power, how quickly the power is achieved
Slow rising then plateau: Aortic stenosis
Waterhammer, fast collapsing: Aortic regurgitation
Bissfiriens pulse (double impulse): Mixed aortic valve disease
JVP examination
Tell difference between carotid and JVP: Occlude, palpate, double waveform, hepatojugular reflex
Right heart failure: ischaemic disease, mitral valve defects
Fluid overload
Tricupsid regurgitation: JVP reflects right venous pressure not right atrial pressure so causes massive V wave on the waveform
Complete heart block
Superior vena caval obstruction: elevated without pulsation, hepatojugular reflex is negative, usually mediastinal lymphadenopathy due to lung cancer
Atrial fibrillation: JVP wave has no wave
Raised JVP can cause a waggling ear lobe
Chest inspection
Midline scar: sternotomy scar, previous valve replacement or by-pass surgery
Scar down leg: By pass surgery
Left axilla diagonally down the back: Thoracotomy scar
Chest deformities: Pectus excavatum, pectus carinatum, kyphosis, scoliosis, can cause a non clinically relevant displaced apex beat
Apex beat and thrills
Check character and placement
Mitral stenosis: Apex beat is “tapping”
Aortic stenosis: Beat is sustained and heavy, displaced downwards and outwards
Mitral+aortic regurgitation: Displaced down and out due to LV hypertrophy
LV dilation: Heart failure, displaced down and out, pulsation will be very diffuse
Can’t palpate: emphysema, pericadial effusion, dextrocardia, obesity
Thrills: Rare, most common is aortic stenosis
Peripheral oedema
Commonly caused by heart failure
Postural oedema due to incompetent venous valves
Check pitting to rule out lymphoedema
Peripheral pulses
Check for peripheral vascular disease
Acute (thrombus) or chronic (atherosclerosis)