Jugular Venous Pressure Flashcards
1
Q
JVP- anatomy
A
- Jugular venous pressure and waveform
- Estimate the JVP by observing the level of pulsation in the intemal jugular vein.
- The vein runs deep to the sternomastoid muscle and enters the thorax between the sternal and cavicular heads.
- The normal JVP waveform has two main peaks per cycle, which helps to distinguish it from the carotid arterial pulse.
- Although the right internal jugular vein is traditionally used, studies using the left internal jugular vein have yielded similarly accurate results.
- The external jugular vein is more superficial, prominent and easier to see.
- It can be kinked or obstructed as it traverses the deep fascia of the neck but, when visible and pulsatile, can be used to estimate the JVP in difficult cases.
- The JVP level reflects right atrial pressure (normailly<7 mmHg/9-10 cmH2O).
- If right atrial pressure is low, the patient may have to lie flat for the JVP to be seen:if high, the patient may need to sit upright(Fig.4.14).
2
Q
JVP Exam
A
- put pt at 45’ angle and head behind a pillow
- look across the patients neck from right to left
- identify the JV pulsation behind the sternicleidomastoid (usually just above the clavicle)
- if a pulsation is visualised, use the abdominojugular/occlusion test to confirm JVP
- JVP is the vertical height in cm between the upper limit of the venous pulsation and the sternal angle
- identify the timing and waveform of the pulsation and note any abnormality
3
Q
JVP Exam if it is difficult to tell waveform from arterial pulsation
A
- abdominojugular test: press firmly on abdomen
- changes with respiration: JVP falls with inspiration (increased intrathoracic pressure)
- occlusion: the JVP waveform is obilterated by gently occluding the vein at the base of the neck
- JVP varies with position
4
Q
JVP Waveforms
A
- a wave corresponds to right atrial contraction and occurs just before the first heart sound.
- in AF a wave is absent
- v wave is caused by atrial filling during ventricular systole when the tricuspid valve is closed
- rarely, a third peak (c wave) may be seen due to closure of the tricuspid valve
5
Q
JVP meaning
A
- Better to estimate high, medium, low
- > 3cm suggests elevated central venous pressure which occurs when fluid overloaded (especially HF)
- also any condition that leads to high right ventricular filling pressure- PE, pulmonary HTN, cardiac tamponade or pericardial constriction
- dyspnoea and elevated JVP is a very valuable sign in diagnosing HF. Examine for oedema/effusions/ascities
- if raised due to obstruction of vena cava (lung Ca) abdo test will be negative
- kussmauls sign is a paradoxical rise of JVP on inspiration that is seen in pericardial constriction, severe RV failure and restrictive cardiomyopathy
6
Q
Precordium
A
- ## The precordium is the anterior chest surface overlaying the heart