Interactive Echocardiography Flashcards

1
Q

Why is echocardiography important?

A

It allows non-invasive diagnosis of cardiac diseases

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2
Q

Most cardiac problems are visible on which view?

A

RPS long axis 4 chamber view = home view

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3
Q

How do you use echocardiography to find the long axis 4-chamber view?

A
  • Scanning through the right chest wall
  • Right ventricular wall first (i.e. most dorsally on the scanner), followed by the myocardium of the AV septum, the myocardium of the left ventricular free wall
  • Tricuspid and mitral valves are also visible
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4
Q

How does blood appear on ultrasound?

A

Black

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5
Q

The end of diastole is marked by what on the ECG?

A

The start of the QRS complex

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6
Q

The end of systole is marked by what on the ECG?

A

End of the T-wave

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7
Q

How do the left and right ventricles appear on ultrasound

A
  • RV should be about 1/3 of the size of the left

- LV wall measurements are ¼ - 1/3 of the chamber diameter

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8
Q

How do the left and right atria appear on ultrasound

A

The LA should look quite ‘boxy’ and is normally slightly bigger than the RA

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9
Q

What is the simplest, most commonly used measurement of systolic function (pump function)?

A

Fractional shortening

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10
Q

Describe fractional shortening

A

looks at systolic and diastolic internal diameter of the left ventricle, then the difference between those expressed as a % of the diastolic diameter gives us fractional shortening

  • Index of pump function
  • Normal should be above 25%
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11
Q

When is fractional shortening not a reliable indicator of systolic function?

A
  • Significant mitral regurgitation
  • Wall motion abnormalities
  • Right sided heart disease associated with pressure overload
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12
Q

Which 3 parts of the heart should be assessed on the normal/home views?

A
  • Chamber sizes relative to each other
  • Wall thickness relative to chambers
  • Systolic function
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13
Q

What is simpsons method of discs used for?

A

Simpson’s method of discs traces around the whole ventricle and summates each disc and creates a volume
- Normal volumes can be looked at as well as the differences in systolic and diastolic volumes
EDV – ESV = total ventricular stroke volume

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14
Q

What is the index of sphericity?

A

Attempt to quantify subjective assessment of rounding of LV

  • Look at the diastolic length of the LV at its maximum length
  • Normal = 2 (twice as long as it is wide)
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15
Q

What are the two differentials if fluid is seen surrounding the heart?

A

Pleural or pericardial effusion

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16
Q

What is doppler used for?

A

Looks at blood flow through the heart

17
Q

When using doppler what must you ensure?

A

That you are as parallel to the blood flow as possible

18
Q

On a colour flow doppler, which colour represents towards and which represents away?

A

BART
Blue = away
Red = towards
E.g. Aortic outflow would appear blue and mitral inflow would appear red

19
Q

What are two features of aortic stenosis?

A

Turbulent flow

Thick hypertrophic walls

20
Q

How is the severity of narrowing in aortic stenosis proportional to the velocity of blood?

A
  • More severe = higher velocity of blood

- Fluid moves faster through an obstruction

21
Q

How can the severity of aortic stenosis be measured?

A

By looking at the pressure gradient between the left ventricle and aorta
- How much extra pressure does the LV have to generate to get blood out and into the aorta?