Self Study Flashcards
What factors are important in determining the size of a myocardial infarct?
degree of collateral blood flow
duration and severity of the occlusion / ischemia
metabolic demand of the myocardium
systemic vascular perfusion (e.g., blood pressure)
effectiveness of therapy
How long after the onset of ischemia does a myocardial infarct become grossly apparent? Histologically apparent?
grossly: 12-24 hours
histologically: 4-12 hours
What are some causes of myocardial ischemia that are NOT related to epicardial coronary artery atherosclerotic occlusion?
- coronary artery vasospasm (e.g., Prinzmetal angina, cocaine abuse)
- coronary artery diseases other than atherosclerosis (e.g., embolism, vasculitis)
- supply / demand imbalance (e.g., severe systemic hypotension, aortic stenosis, cardiomyopathies, tertiary syphilis of the aorta, coronary artery congenital anomalies)
What conditions are known to predispose to infective endocarditis?
- pre-existing valvular abnormalities
- prosthetic heart valves
- congenital heart disease
- immunodeficiency states
- intravenous drug abuse
What complications are likely to cause death in infective endocarditis
sepsis secondary to bacterial endocarditis; acute mitral regurgitation (e.g., secondary to a perivalvular ring abscess); arrhythmia