Heart Flashcards

1
Q

List MI DDx.

A
CVS
o	Angina (stable)
o	Arrhythmia 
o	Pericardial effusion/pericarditis 
o	Aortic aneurysm/dissection 
Respiratory
o	PE (pleuritic, sharp)
o	Pneumothorax
o	Pulmonary oedema (HF)
o	Pneumonia/pleuritis 
GIT
o	GORD
o	Oesophagitis 
o	Oesophageal perforation (transmural- Boerrhave syndrome, non-transmural- Mallory Weiss tear)
o	Acute pancreatitis 
Psychiatric
o	Anxiety disorder- panic attack 
MSK injury
o	Chest trauma- rib #
o	Intercostal muscle injury
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2
Q

Describe the course of the RCA.

A

Pathway
⇒Arises in R aortic sinus (ascending aorta) -> atrioventricular groove
⇒ Passes below pulmonary trunk (between R auricle and infundibulum of R heart)
⇒ Descends in atrioventricular groove
⇒ Continues posto-inferiorly into base of heart

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3
Q

What are the branches of the RCA?

A

Branches:
o SA nodal artery -> supplies SA node (60% hearts)
o R marginal artery -> supplies apex and part of RV
o AV nodal artery -> supplies AV node (emerges in characteristic posterior upward “kink”)
o Posterior descending artery (PDA)-> IV septum (posterior 1/3)
• PDA arises from RCA (right dominant), or end of LAD (left dominant, 10% cases)

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4
Q

What does the RCA supply?

A
o	RA
o	RV
o	LV (posterior aspect) 
o	SA node and AV node
o	Inter-atrial septum
o	Part of IV septum (posterior 1/3)
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5
Q

Describe the course of the LCA.

A

Pathway:
⇒ LCA arises in the L aortic sinus (between left auricle and infundibulum of RV)
⇒ Bifurcates to left circumflex (LCX) and left anterior descending (LAD)

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6
Q

What are the branches of the LCA?

A

Branches:
LCX
• Courses around base of heart via atrioventricular groove -> anastomoses with RCA
• Branches:
- Left marginal artery
- Sometimes SA nodal artery (40% hearts)
• Supplies: LV (posterior and lateral walls), anterolateral papillary muscle

LAD
• Courses in anterior interventricular groove towards apex
• Branches:
- Several large ventricular branches to the left
- Conus branches- upper part of RV
• Anastomoses with PDA from RCA at apex
• Supplies: most of LA, LV, interventricular septum (including AV-bundle)

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7
Q

What is the coronary sinus?

A
  • Collection of veins joined to form large vessel, collecting blood from myocardium
  • Then delivers less-oxygenated blood to RA (as do SVC and IVC)
  • Drains into RA via coronary sinus orifice (between IVC and tricuspid valve)
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8
Q

What are the coronary sinus tributaries?

A
  1. Great cardiac vein: apex -> ascends anterior interventricular groove (beside LAD) -> upper (left) end of coronary sinus
  2. Middle cardiac vein: apex -> ascents in posterior interventricular groove (beside PDA) -> coronary sinus
  3. Small cardiac vein: accompanies marginal branch of the RCA -> drains into coronary sinus (or directly into RA)
  4. Posterior vein of LV: joins coronary sinus to left of middle cardiac vein
  5. Oblique vein of LA: runs downwards into left end of coronary sinus
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9
Q

What are the likely locations of thrombi formation?

A
  • LAD- first 1.5-2cm
  • LCX- first 1.5-2cm
  • RCA- proximal 1/3 and distal 1/3
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10
Q

What are the common sites of stenosis and atherosclerosis in the coronary sinus?

A

• LAS occlusion (40-50%)- proximal 2cm
- Supplies: interventricular septum (2/3rds), LV, majority LA -> anterior heart surface
• LCA occlusion (15-20%)- proximal 2cm
- Supplies: LA, LV (postero-lateral aspect) -> lateral and posterior heart surfaces
• RCA occlusion (30-40%)- proximal 1/3 or distal 1/3
- Supplies: interventricular septum (1/3rd), RA, RV, LV (inferior aspect) -> inferior and posterior heart surfaces
• PDA occlusion
- Supplies: posterior surface of heart

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11
Q

What is the arterial supply for the SA and AV node?

A
  • SA node: SA nodal artery supplied by the RCA early branches (60% hearts) and LCX early branches (40%)
  • AV node: supplied by AV nodal artery from RCA
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12
Q

What are the locations of potential heart rupture post MI?

A
1. LV wall rupture 
(heart soft due to granulation tissue)
-> cardiac tamponade -> death (90%)
2. Rupture of intraventricular septum
-> VSD -> L to R shunt -> RV overload -> increased pulmonary blood flow -> secondary overload of LA and LV -> declined forward flow -> compensatory vasoconstriction -> increased TPR -> increased L to R shunt -> haemodynamic compromise
3. Papillary muscle 
(assoc w inferior MI)
-> mitral regurgitation -> LVF -> acute pulmonary oedema
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13
Q

Give examples of systolic and diastolic murmurs?

What are some combined murmurs?

A

Systolic murmurs:

  • Aortic stenosis
  • Pulmonary stenosis
  • Mitral regurgitation
  • Tricuspid regurgitation
  • ASD
  • VSD
  • Flow murmur

Diastolic murmurs:

  • Aortic regurgitation
  • Pulmonary regurgitation
  • Mitral stenosis
  • Tricuspid stenosis

Combined murmurs:

  • PDA
  • Severe aortic coarctation
  • Acute severe aortic regurgitation
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14
Q

List some acute complications post MI.

A

o Arrhythmia (VF/VT, sinus bradycardia, AV block) (75-95%)
o Mural thrombo-embolism
o Cardiogenic shock
o Re-infarction or extension of current infarct
o Dysfunctional contraction (10%)
o Rupture- papillary muscle, LV wall (8%)

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15
Q

List some subacute complications post MI.

A

o Post-infarct fibrinous pericarditis
o Dressler’s syndrome (autoimmune fibrinous pericarditis)
o Rupture- interventricular septal, LV wall
o Emboli form mural thrombus (15-40%)

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16
Q

List some long-term complications post MI.

A

o Rupture (5%)- LV wall (tamponade), VSD, papillary muscle (valvular incompetence)
o Heart failure, LVF (60%)
o Stroke risk ongoing (from thrombo-emboli)