Heart Block Flashcards
Definition?
AV heart block is defined as impaired conduction from the atria to the ventricles. There are 3 degrees, the first is PR interval> 0.2 s, the second I is Progressive prolongation of the PR interval with eventual loss of AV conduction for 1 beat. The second II is Occasional loss of AV conduction for 1 beat, but no prolongation of PR intervals. The third is complete in which there is no co-ordination between atrial and ventricular contraction.
RF?
• Age • Higher vagal tone-younger, athletic pts • CAD • Acute coronary syndrome • AVN-blocking agents-BB, CCBs, AAs • CHF • HT • Cardiomyopathy • Surgery • Electrolyte disturbances Myotonic dystrophy, Erb dystrophy
ddx?
• Junctional rhythm-retrograde P waves inverted in inferior leads
• AF or multifocal atrial tachycardia-distinct P waves and grouped patterns of RR intervals
• Sinus rhythm-if junctional escape rate is the same as the sinus rate
• Tachy-brady syndrome-irregular and short RR intervals but SAN slow to take over so ventricular rate slows down.
SVT-p waves inverted in inferior leads
Epidemiology?
Age: elderly
Sex: male
Ethnicity:
Prevalence:
Aetiology
IHD, fibrosis, aortic valve calcification, surgery, digoxin toxicity and infiltration
CP?
- RF
- Age more than 50
- Syncope-Stokes-Adams attacks
- Bradycardia
- Male
- Fatigue
- Cardinal CVS signs of hypoperfusion
- High BP
- Cannon A waves-JVP-contraction against closed tricuspid valve
Pathophysiology?
• Lev’s disease-part of ageing but can also be congenital
• Fibrosis develops in the bundle of His, preventing from an impulse being conducted to the ventricles
• IHD-necroed heart tissue cannot conduct impulses at the same frequency-irritation and abnormal firing
Slow escape beats
Investigations-first line?
12-lead ECG-no consistent PR relationship
Serum troponin-elevated
Potassium-low/high
Calcium-low/high
pH-low or high
Digitalis-normal/high if taken or toxicity shows
Management-first line?
- Condition specific management and discontinuation of AVN-blocking drugs
- Digoxin immune Fab for digitalis toxicity
- Glucagon fro beta-blocker toxicity
- Calcium chloride for CCB toxicity
- PPM or cardiac resynch therapy and ICD placement
- For AV block, usually a dual-chamber (1 right atrial and 1 right ventricular lead) pacemaker is placed.
- The procedure includes a 2-inch incision at the non-dominant shoulder, placement of the leads through the subclavian vein, and placement of the pulse generator in a small subcutaneous pocket. The entire procedure usually takes a few hours and requires an overnight hospital stay.
- Biventricular pacemaker (placement of a third wire, in a branch of the coronary sinus, to enable left ventricular pacing), with or without an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) placement, may be considered when the left ventricular ejection fraction is <35%
- Atropine in severe bradycardia
Management severe?
- Condition specific management and discontinuation of AVN-blocking drugs and temporary pacing
- When the ventricular rate is significantly low (<40 to 45 bpm) or the blood pressure is low (mean arterial pressure <65 mmHg), temporary (transcutaneous or transvenous) pacing should be considered. Transvenous pacing is much more reliable than transcutaneous pacing and should be performed by a cardiologist when the heart block leads to haemodynamic instability.
PPM or cardiac resynch and ICD placement
Prognosis?
• Third degree irreversible block has a high risk of progression to ventricular asystole so must be implanted with a permanent pacemaker, which has a low rate of complications
Complications?
Pacemaker implantation-bleeding, trauma, pneumothorax, cardiac tamponade, pocket haematoma development, infection of lead, lead malfunction