Paeds - cardio murmurs Flashcards

1
Q

PDA: type of murmur and location

A

-Diastolic machinery (continuous) murmur best heard in the left upper sternal border

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2
Q

PDA: timeline of closure, type of defect and presenting complaint

A
  • Stops functioning by day 1-3 and closes by 2-3 day of life.
  • L-R shunt due to increased aortic pressure

PC

  • Associated with pulmonary hypertension, RV hypertrophy and eventually LV hypertrophy
  • SOB +/- signs of HF
  • Poor feeding/weight giant
  • LRTI due to wet lungs
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3
Q

PDA: investigations and management

A
  • Echo will show direction of blood flow and RV hypertrophy

- If still open after one year (spontaneous closure unlikely) do transcatheter/surgical closure

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4
Q

ASD: type of murmur and location?

A
  • Mid systolic crescendo-decrescendo with fixed S2 split (pulmonary valve closes after aortic due to increased volume in RHS of heart)
  • Best heard in left upper sternal border
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5
Q

Outline the PC of ASDs and management

A
  • Often found antenatally/NIPE and may be asymptomatic in childhood
  • SOB
  • Decreased feeding/wt gain/failure to thrive
  • LRTI due to wet lungs

Management
-Refer to paeds cardio —> big ASD is fixed with trans venous catheter closure whilst smaller/asymptomatic ones are treated with W&W

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6
Q

VSD: nature of murmur and location? What conditions are VSDs associated with?

A
  • Pan systolic murmur +/- thrill or heave
  • LLSB
  • Associated with Down’s and Turner’s syndrome
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7
Q

How do VSDs present? How are they managed?

A
  • Often picked up antenatally
  • Decreased feeding, dyspnea, tachypnea and failure to thrive

Management

  • Small VSD without PHTN/HF: W&W
  • Bigger VSD: transverse catheter closure or open heart surgery
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8
Q

Pulmonary valve stenosis: type of murmur and area

A

-Ejection systolic murmur found in pulmonary area

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9
Q

What conditions are associated with pulmonary valve stenosis?

A
  • ToF
  • Williams syndrome
  • Noonan syndrome
  • Congenital rubella syndrome
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10
Q

What are some signs of pulmonary valve stenosis?

A
  • Ejection systolic murmur
  • Palpable thrill in pulmonary area
  • Raised JVP with big A waves
  • RV heave (associated with RV hypertrophy)
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11
Q

How is pulmonary valve stenosis managed?

A
  • Echo monitoring
  • Mild: W&W
  • Symptomatic patient: balloon valvuloplasty with enlarge valve
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12
Q

Aortic stenosis: type of murmur and location

A

-Ejection systolic murmur found in aortic area

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13
Q

Aortic stenosis: presenting complaint and signs?

A
  • Mild: asymptomatic and usually incidental discovery
  • Significant: fatigue, dizziness, fainting (worse on exertion), if severe will present with HF within months of life
  • Signs: raising pulse, narrow pulse pressure
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14
Q

Aortic stenosis: investigations and management

A
  • Echo, ecg and exercise testing
  • Percutaneous balloon aortic valvuloplasty
  • Surgical aortic valvotomy/replacement
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