Tricuspid Regurgitation Flashcards
What are the causes of tricuspid regurgitation?
(M: TR ABCDEF)
- Tricuspid valve prolapse
- Rheumatic heart disease
- AMI / IHD with papillary muscle infarct
- Big heart (cardiomegaly) from pulmonary hypertension or cardiomyopathy, MR
- Congenital - Ebstein anomaly
- Degenerative (carcinoid syndrome)
- Endocarditis - especially in IV drug abuse
- Functional TR (cardiomegaly)
What are the clinical signs of tricuspid regurgitation?
- Raised JVP
- Thrill over left sternal edge
- Pulsatile liver, ascites and peripheral oedema
- Evidence of infective endocarditis
- Pulmonary hypertension (causing tricuspid regurgitation)
- Third heard sound
- Pansystolic murmur
How would you investigate a patient with tricuspid regurgitation?
ECG: right ventricular hypertrophy
CXR: double right heart border (large left atrium)
Echo: TR jet, right ventricular dilatation
How would you manage a patient with tricuspid regurgitation?
Medical management: diuretics, beta blockers, ACE inhibitors
Surgical management if medical treatment unsuccessful
What are the complications of TR?
- Right heart hypertrophy and failure
- Infective endocarditis
What is carcinoid syndrome?
Carcinoid tumour from GI tract (95%)
Malignant neuroendocrine cells secrete vasoactive substances (serotonin, bradykinin, tryptophan)
-> Damages endothelium of right heart leading to fibrosis and thickening of heart valve and myocardium
-> Regurgitation / stenosis / heart failure
-> Most commonly affecting tricuspid valve