Mitral regurgitation Flashcards
How is it defined
Weakening of the connective tissue in the mitral valve which prevents it from staying closed during ventricular contraction- causes blood to flow back into LA
Causes
MITRAL PROLAPSE:
Myomatous degeneration: weakening of the connective tissue at the annulus
stretched chordae tendinae
can no longer hold the valve shut
RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE:
chronic inflammation= fibrosis of leaflet= no seal
WEAKING OF PAP MUSCLES
can no longer hold the chordae tendinae in place
LV FAILURE
dilation of LV so annulus wider
IE
Investigations
1- CXR- shows cardiomegaly, calcification of valve, LA enlargement
2-ECG
3-CARDIAC CATHERISATION
Signs
1-Murmurs: Pansystolic murmur 2- JVP prominent in RH failure 3-hyperdynamic apex beat 4-RV hypertrophy
Symptoms
If acute: SOB due to pulmonary oedema if chronic: Fatigue Palpitations Right heart failure
Treatment
mitral valve replacement
valvotomy
TAVI
For acute MR: medication for the reduction of preload and afterload
what happen to EDV and ESV in acute and chronic
In acute: -ESV and EDV decrease -Wall tension decreases In chronic : -EDV decrease -ESV returns to normal
Explain the differences in the murmur when squatting and standing
When squatting: increased VR Leaflet area increases valve regurgitates later and murmur is later When standing -VR not as great -leaflet area not as expanded -valve regurgitation is earlier
When do you get a hyper dynamic apex beat?
Not much hypertrophy in LV
What happens to LA compliance
Chronic
- It increases
- Means the atrium can receive more blood at a lower pressure
- prevents the pressure In the atria from becoming greater than the ventricles
- can lead to AF due to dilation of the cells
Other:
-Can decrease due to thickening of the myocardium