Valvular Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What is echocardiography? How does it work?

A

Echocardiography is the first line exam done to diagnosed cardiovascular diseases. It is a fast, safe and practical exam that uses ultrasound to examine the heart, asses the cardiac function and structure. The main limit is that it is expert dependent.

Echocardiographic imaging relies on the reflection of ultrasound waves from structures within the cardiovascular system.

In an echo image the black part is blood as it is less reflective while the grey is the tissue. Different frequencies can be used to increase or decrease resolution as they are directly proportional, also different wavelength have different penetration power.

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2
Q

What are some echo approaches?

A

1.Transthoracic : it is the most common, used in 95% of cases. You put the probe in specific points called views or windows: parasternal, apical, subcostal, suprasternal. You can get different pictures of the heart depending on these points.

  1. Transesophageal : done by introducing a transesophageal probe in the esophagus to get very close to the heart, useful to study posterior stuctures (not well visible in the transthoracic) : left atrium, left atrial appendage, pulmonary veins, interatrial septum, mitral valve. It is usully a second level exam, so you do transthoracic and then if you need some clarifications or in case you cannot conclude a diagnosis, you can use it. It is usually used directly in case of thrombi in LA, because the transthoracic is unuseful.
  2. Intracardiac : it is not a standard approach. The probe is introduced in the femoral vein up to the RA. It is mainly used to monitor percutaneous procedures.
  3. Epicardial : it is performed only in the OR, less common. Used to check results of an intervention when the transesophageal approach cannot be used.
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3
Q

What are the different echo modalities?

A
  1. 2D echo : Gives a snapshot in time of a cross-section of tissue, if these sections are produced in quick succession and displayed on a screen, they can show real-time imaging of heart chambers, valves and blood vessels. Can evaluate different parts of the LV wall by different views, long axis, two chamber and four chamber view.
  2. M-mode : Transmission and reception of US signal along only one line, giving higher sensitivity. Can be used to measure diameter and thickness of myocardial wall.
  3. Doppler : It is used to evaluate the velocity of flow, it uses the reflection of US by moving RBC. The Doppler phenomenon is used to derived velocity information from frequency shifts.
    - Continuous wave Doppler : uses two crystal one transmitting continuously and the other receiving continuously. Does not localize precise flow signal but can measure peak and mean velocity.
    - Pulsed wave Doppler : used single crystal to calculate velocity in a single point like assessing diastolic function of LV.
  4. Color Doppler : It allows us to study the direction of the flow. BART convention, blue is away and red is towards. Very useful in diagnosis of regurgitations.
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4
Q

How are valvular disease classified?

A

They are classified based on type of defect :
• Stenosis : the orifice of the valve is narrowed, therefore it does not allow the normal passage of blood.
• Insufficiency : there is a leak of blood into the wrong chamber, as the valve is not able to stop the backflow.
• Mixed Valvular Disease : there is a combination of stenosis and insufficiency.

Classified also based on number of valves affected :

• Single Valve Disease: one valve is pathologically modified. For example, the aortic valve alone can be affected causing either aortic stenosis or insufficiency.
• Multivalvular Disease: more than one valve is pathologically modified. For example, both the aortic and the mitral valves are affected.

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5
Q

Epidemiology and etiology of valvular diseases?

A

Their prevalence is 2.5 % of the general population. The most frequent valvular disease is aortic stenosis with a mea age of 70. The second most frequent valvulopathy is mitral regurgitation followed by aortic reguargitation. The least frequent is mitral stenosis.
Degenerative etiology is the most common etiology of aortic stenosis, aortic regurgitation, and mitral regurgitation. While rheumatic etiology is the most common in mitral stenosis.

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6
Q

What is wiggers diagram?

A

It is a diagram that represents the relationship between pressure and volume in the different cardiac chambers during the cardiac cycle. It represents the ventricular, aortic and atrial pressure and volume.

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7
Q

What are the three cusps of the aortic valve?

A

Right Coronary Cusp (R), located below the right coronary sinus from which the right coronary artery originates.

Left Coronary Cusp (L), located below the left coronary sinus from which the left coronary artery originates.

Non Coronary Cusp (N), located below the non coronary sinus from which no artery originates.

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8
Q

What is the commissure?

A

The commissure is the point where each cusp meets the other. This anatomical structure is important because it is the point in which the inflammatory process starts in case of rheumatic disease.

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9
Q

What is the free edge structure?

A

During systole, the three cusps coarct together at this level.

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10
Q

What is the mitroaortic continuity?

A

It is the fibrous sheet located between the non coronary and the left coronary leaflet of the aortic valve and the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve. This structure is important because in aortic endocarditis a common complication if the formation of an infective abscess of this structure.

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11
Q

What is the etiology of aortic stenosis?

A

In younger patients the main cause is a bicuspid configuration, which affects 2% of the population. This conformation is more subject to degeneration compared to the normal tricuspid configuration. In 6% of patients with bicuspid aortic valve there is the coexistence of another congenital defect which is the coarctation of the aorta which is a restriction at the level of the isthmus.

To sum up : in the case of middle aged patients (within their 4th or 5th decades of life) we should think about a bicuspid or rheumatic disease. In old patients (within their 7th or 8th decades of life) we should think about a degenerative disease with a phenotypic tricuspid valve. However, a bicuspid valve is also possible.

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12
Q

What are the mechanisms of aortic stenosis?

A

In both tricuspid and bicuspid aortic stenosis the degenerative process is the same. The cusps fuse together in a so called raphe and calcify. This creates a rigid valve and impairs normal movement.

On the other hand in rheumatic disease the process is inflammatory. It starts from the commissure and spreads to the leaflets where it is called valvulitis. After the acute phase the healing process leaves fibrotic tissue in the commissures and causes a restriction.

There are different degrees of aortic stenosis related to the severity of the degenerative process.

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13
Q

What is the molecular and cellular mechanism behind aortic stenosis?

A

The process of degeneration in aortic stenosis is the same that occurs in atherosclerosis. An inflammatory process with endothelial injury on the leaflets and infiltration of cholesterol. The inflammatory reaction leads to a differentiation of the interstitial cells to osteoblast like cells with the deposition of micro and macro calcifications. This is the pathophysiological process that can lead to the calcification of the aortic valve.

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14
Q

What happens to the left ventricle during aortic stenosis?

A

During aortic stenosis, there is a remodelling of the left ventricle in terms of hypertrophy, but also a remodelling of the small intramyocardial vessels, because the hypertrophy can compress them during the systole. Moreover, the number of small vessels does not increase parallel to the increase in the left ventricular muscle, creating a mismatch between mass and vessels. On the other hand, the compression of the small vessels causes a micro vascular ischemia of the left ventricle, which is one of the main causes of left ventricular dysfunction and dilation in the late stage of aortic stenosis.

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15
Q

How are hemodynamics affected due to aortic stenosis?

A

There is a gradient between LV and aortic pressure, due to the obstruction at the level of the aortic valve (the higher is the gradient, more severe is the stenosis). The aortic valve area progressively decreases, and the LV adapts through hypertrophy (the left ventricle increases its myocardial mass to pump more blood through the narrowed orifice). This early coping mechanism yields diastolic dysfunction due to decreased compliance. Late changes include systolic dysfunction, myocardial ischemia and fibrosis due to microvascular dysfunction and decreased contractility, with eventual atrial fibrillation due to diastolic dysfunction, mitral regurgitation coexisting with artic stenosis and ultimately can lead to heart failure.

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16
Q

How is aortic stenosis diagnosed and graded? What is aortic valve calcium score?

A

Diagnoses is done with echo. We should report 6 parameter for aortic stenosis : velocity of Doppler signals recorded in aortic valve, mean gradient, aortic valve area, LV function, stroke volume and EF.

To grade AS we use the echo parameters : aortic velocity, aortic valve area and mean gradient. A sign of severe aortic stenosis is when the area is less than 1 cm2, peak aortic velocity ≥4 m/s and the mean gradient is greater than 40 mmHG.

When we are not able to grade the severity of AS, we can perform a CT scan to evaluate the presence of calcium (because not in all patients echo has a good performance) The more the calcium the more severe the stenosis.

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17
Q

What are the symptoms associated to aortic stenosis?

A

Chest pain (angina), reduced coronary flow, increased demand (high afterload), syncope/dizziness, fixed cardiac output, vasodepressor response, dyspnea on exertion and rest and impaired exercise tolerance.
Other signs include diastolic and systole dysfunction.

Angina is due to a decrease in perfusion because of stenosis or microvascular dysfunction. Indeed, 25-30% of patients with critical stenosis (especially when it is degenerative) present with associated epicardial coronary artery disease. It is possible to have stenosis in concomitance with CAD because the mechanisms of stenosis and atherosclerosis are the same.

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18
Q

What are some physical findings in patients with aortic stenosis?

A

The typical aortic murmur is a diamond shaped systolic crescendo decrescendo murmur (lub-whoosh-dub). The main site of auscultation is the right second intercostal space. Intensity does not predict severity. The murmur radiates to the carotids, mostly the right carotid ( important for DDX with HCM).

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19
Q

ECG in aortic stenosis? Sokolow index?

A

The ECG shows LV hypertrophy with ischemic ST alteration mimicking subendocardial ischemia.There is also alteration in repolarization in patients with severe LV hypertrophy.

SOKOLOW INDEX : A classical approach to define LVH, and it calculates the sum of QRS voltage of S wave in V1 or V2 and R wave in V5 or V6 : if it is greater than 35 mm it indicates hypertrophy. Putting together all this information you can give a diagnosis, grade the severity and stratify the prognosis.

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20
Q

What are the ESC guidelines for aortic stenosis?

A

There is no medication for valvulopathies. The only therapy is surgery. There is indication for surgery in asymptomatic patients ONLY when the patients present with severe aortic stenosis and LV dysfunction.

There are two therapeutic options: standard surgical aortic valve replacement for patients younger than 50yo with low risk. The other option is TAVI (transcatheter aortic valvular implantation) and it is for patients older than 75yo and patients with high or very high surgical risk (which cannot be operated, such as patients with previous radiation therapy).

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21
Q

What is aortic regurgitation?

A

Aortic regurgitation happens when there is a leak in an incompetent aortic valve and blood comes back into the left ventricle.
Etiology : congenital (bicuspid valve), aorthopathy, acquired (RHD, degenerative, connective tissue disorders) or caused by acute aortic insufficiency (aortic dissection, IE, trauma).

22
Q

What is aorthopathy?

A

It is a genetic disease affecting which affects aorta). Aorthopathies usually cause the dilation of the ascending aorta involving sinotubular junction or dilation of the sinus of Valsalva, which creates a mal-coaptation among the aortic cusps, causing the annulus to dilate and, finally, aortic regurgitation.

Cystic medial necrosis, collagen disorders (e.g Marfan’s
syndrome), Ehler- Danlos, osteogenesis imperfecta and Pseudoxanthoma elasticum.

23
Q

What is Marfan syndrome?

A

Patients affected have a mutation in genes encoding for fibrillin. It affects several organs like: eyes, heart, aorta, junctions, and so on.
In terms of cardiovascular complications, patients will undergo several problems and interventions during their life, usually on the heart. Moreover, there could also be aneurysms in the ascending and descending aorta, meaning that there is a high risk of aortic dissection. Marfan’s syndrome is an example of aorthopathy with aortic regurgitation.

24
Q

What is the pathophysiology of aortic regurgitation?

A

Aortic regurgitation causes volume overload. The LV responds to the volume overload with hyperthrophic remodeling in order to increase ventricular mass. As the disease progresses, systolic dysfunction and symptoms of heart failure may occur. Following the volume overload, the stroke volume increases as well. This causes the systolic blood pressure to increase, but at the same time, as regurgitation occurs through the aortic valve, a decrease in the diastolic blood pressure is observable. A big difference between the diastolic and systolic values of blood pressure are seen. The bigger the difference, the most severe is the aortic regurgitation.

25
Q

Physical exam and symptoms of aortic regurgitation?

A

The most common symptoms are : dyspnea and orthopnea, reduced physical capacity, chest pain (not frequent as in aortic stenosis) and a reduction in diastolic pressures.

Physical examination can find : a diastolic murmur is present in the aortic area, quickies sign (capillary pulsation), corrigans sign ( water hammer pulse), de musset sign ( systolic head bobbing), muellers sign ( systolic pulsation of uvula), traubes sign (pistol shot femorals), hills sign (lower extremity BP > upper extremity BP).

During auscultation the murmur is defined as early diastolic, represented visually by a decrescendo. (Lub-tarrr)

26
Q

ECG in aortic regurgitation?

A

Similar findings of aortic stenosis. LV hyperthrophy and in this case T wave inversion is associated with ST depression.

27
Q

Treatment of aortic regurgitation?

A

Aortic regurgitation has better prognosis than aortic stenosis. It can be asymptomatic for many years but when symptoms arise prognosis is poor.

If the patient is either asymptomatic with LVEF< 50, if he has a concomitant aortopathy, and/or is symptomatic this is the leading point for surgery.

Symptomatic patients whom may not undergo surgery are prescribed ACEi.

28
Q

What are the components of the mitral valve?

A

Mitral valve consists of several components:
-Anterior and posterior annulus.
-Anterior and posterior leaflets.
-Posterior wall of the left atrium could be included and will indeed be part of the posterior part of the mitral valve.
-Chordae tendineae (fibrotic elements that connect the papillary muscles to the RAW zone of the mitral leaflet. It prevents leaflets to collapse into the left atrium during systole).
-Anterior and posterior groups of papillary muscles.
-Segment of left ventricular wall close to the papillary muscles.
Even a single dysfunction on one of the components previously cited can create a mitral valve dysfunction which can be mitral regurgitation or stenosis

29
Q

What is the mitral valve constituted from?

A

A fibrosa layer made of collagen, spongiosa layer of proteoglycans and atrialis/ventricularis layer composed of elastin.

We notice that in a pathological state the composition of the spongiosa layer changes increasing thickness and resulting in a floppy valve.

30
Q

What is the function of the mitral valve?

A

Overall, the mitral valve has an important function in addition to allow the passage from the LA to the LV. The mitral valve is also able to direct and redirect the flow into different part of the left ventricle. This is very important in an energetic point of view because this creates a laminar flow that moves the blood flow from a ventricles chamber to another preparing very effectively the systole.

31
Q

What is mitral valve regurgitation? Pathophysiology?

A

Mitral valve regurgitation is a systolic leakage of the mitral valve from left ventricle to left atrium.
It is the second most frequent valvular heart disease and is most prevalent in patients between the age of 60 to 70 years old.

With regurgitation we have :
-Remodeling of the left atrium (with the pressure the LA becomes more compliant and expands to reduce the pressure) possibly creating LA dysfunction and HF.
- Remodeling of the LV, increase of the dimension, possibly creating LV dysfunction and HF.
- In pulmonary circulation there is elevated pulmonary vein pressure, extravascular water in veins causing oedema or dyspnea.
- In systemic circulation there is SV decrease, symptoms of cardiac output reduction but not tachy.
- In late stage there is right side complications with tricuspid regurgitations.

32
Q

What is the pathophysiological triad in mitral valve regurgitation?

A

We must take into consideration the etiology, the lesions caused by the disease and the dysfunctions it is causing. This is important as therapeutic approach depends on these factors.

33
Q

How are mitral regurgitations classified?

A

Primary MR : Anatomical defects of the component of the mitral valve apparatus. It is not directly related to problems with the left ventricle or other heart structures. Instead, it is primarily a valve-specific issue. For example: perforation mitral leaflets, prolapse of mitral leaflets, papillary muscles rupture.

Secondary MR : (also known as functional mitral regurgitation), is a consequence of underlying heart conditions that affect the geometry and function of the heart’s cavities. The valve is apparently not defective.
• Conditions that can lead to secondary mitral regurgitation include heart failure, myocardial infarction, dilated ventricle, enlargement of left atrium or other structural heart diseases. All of that can provoke a remodeling of the mitral leaflets and reduce the coaptation resulting to a MR.

34
Q

What are the most common etiologies of mitral regurgitation?

A

Keep in mind that the same etiology can provoke different mechanical dysfunctions.

  • Endocarditis can provoke perforation or can provoke chordal rupture.
  • Chronic ischemia can provoke secondary mitral regurgitation with the remodeling of the LV.
  • Acute myocardial infarction can provoke a rupture of the papillary muscles with flail of the mitral leaflet (flail is a situation where a portion of the mitral valve leaflet becomes detached or disrupted).
    Acute myocardial infarction is considerate as primary MR because we have a rupture of the chordae of the papillary muscles causing a prolapse.
35
Q

What is the carpentier classification for mitral valve regurgitation?

A

Type I : Carpentier type 1 disease is a normal leaflet motion and position with no prolapse. Classical carpentier type 1 disease are perforation or annular dysfunction or cleft. e.g congenital hole in leaflet.

Type II : Carpentier type 2 disease are prolapses, A prolapse is an excess of movement of one or both leaflets or one segment of leaflet. e.g patients with fibroelastic deficiency (histological change in composition) which causes fragile tissue. Also Barlow disease where there is an increase of tissue causing a floppy valve.

Type IIIa : Carpentier type IIIa disease is characterized by a restricted leaflet motion in systole and diastole. In this category, the mitral valve leaflets have limited or restricted motion, which affects their ability to open and close properly. e.g RHD causing restrictio of leaflets due to accumulation of fibrotic tissue. There can be a combination of stenosis and regurgitation.

Type IIIb : Carpentier type IIIb represents restricted leaflet motion in systole, it is caused by LV/LA dilatation, this is a second mitral regurgitation.

36
Q

What are the different types of secondary mitral regurgitation?

A

Atrial functional MR : characterized by remodeling of the LA, dysfunction of the mitral annulus w/ regurgitation but normal LV function. Etiology is 6%-7% AF, up to 53% in HFpEF.

Ventricular MR : characterized by systolic LV dysfunction, dilated LV secondary to DCM or ischemic cardiomyopathies due to MI.

37
Q

What are the symptoms of mitral regurgitation?

A

Dyspnea, orthopnea, palpitations (mostly supraventricular arrhythmias, the most common being AF), fatigue, right sided failure and systemic embolization.

38
Q

How is mitral regurgitation diagnosed?

A

Auscultation : systolic murmur mainly in patients with mitral valve prolapse. Described as pan systolic murmur meaning it can be heard throughout all of systole, represented with a plateau wave form. Murmur is so loud it drowns out S1 and S2.

ECG : can be unremarkable in some patients. In others can show signs of LA enlargement due to P wave increased duration, AFIB, LVH and RVH.

Tools : chest x ray can be used but is not the test of choice. Echocardiogram is the test used for diagnosis and evaluation of patient.

39
Q

What is mitral stenosis? Etiology?

A

It is the narrowing of the mitral valve orifice. It can be rheumatic (after endocarditis, valvulitis, pericarditis or myocarditis) or degenerative in origin most common in elderly people due to calcification changes in the anterior annulus.

40
Q

What is the pathophysiology of mitral stenosis? Symptoms and complications?

A

We should expect increase in diastolic gradient between atrium and LV. Pathophysiology is similar to MR but in MS there is more stasis favoring the formation of thrombi in the LA.

Symptoms which are exactly the same as MR : fatigue, palpitation, cough, dyspnea, left sided failure accompanied by orthopnea and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, right sided failure.

Complications include atrial arrhythmias, systemic embolization, congestive heart failure, pulmonary infarcts, hemoptysis, endocarditis and pulmonary infections.

41
Q

What are some physical exam findings in MS? ECG findings?

A

Auscultation : First heart sound (S1) is accentuated and snapping, opening snap after aortic valve closure because of the sudden opening of the mitral valve , mid diastolic murmur, low pitch diastolic rumble at the apex, systolic murmur if combination of stenosis and regurgitation. Starts loud then becomes quieter. (Lub-di-derrr)

ECG : most common arrhythmia is AF, there is usually broad P wave indicating atrial enlargement.

42
Q

How is mitral stenosis graded? How is the severity defined?

A

Normal valve area : 4-6 cm^2

Mild mitral stenosis : MVA 1.5-2.5 cm^2 with minimal symptoms.

Moderate mitral stenosis : MVA 1.0-1.5 cm^2, usually does not produce symptoms at rest, if the patient encounter symptoms, we consider intervention.

Severe mitral stenosis : MVA < 1.0 cm^2.

Nowadays, from a hemodynamic point of view, we consider a critical mitral valve stenosis below 1,5 cm^2 and we consider undergoing surgery especially if there are symptoms.

To measure severity of MS we measure the gradient by continuous doppler.

43
Q

How is mitral stenosis treated?

A

If the stenosis is less than 1.5 cm^2 we have to consider the possibility of surgery. The choice of procedure depends on contraindications and surgical risk profile. If patient is symptomatic the first approach is percutaneous mitral commissurotomy. If it can’t be done surgery is the next best thing.

44
Q

Anatomy of the tricuspid valve?

A

The tricuspid valve is usually composed of three leaflets : the anterior, the posterior and the septal leaflet. They are connected by three commissures : the antero-septal, the postero-septal and the antero-posterior commissure.

Together with the tricuspid valve there is a sub valvular apparatus consisting of papillary muscles and chordae tendineae.

Anterior papillary muscles provide the chordae to anterior and septal leaflets. Biggest group.
Posterior papillary muscles provide chordae to the posterior and septal leaflets.
Septal papillary muscles provide chordae to septal leaflets.

45
Q

Anatomic variability of the tricuspid valve?

A

Type I→ three leaflets: anterior, septal and posterior. (54%)
Type II→ three leaflets: one septal and two mural leaflets, meaning that it is possible to separate the anterior leaflet from the posterior one.
Type III→ four leaflets. This variant happens in case of indentations or clefts and has an impact on the pathophysiology of tricuspid regurgitation and on the evaluation of percutaneous catheter
intervention.
Type IV→ five leaflets.

46
Q

What is tricuspid regurgitation? Classification?

A

Tricuspid regurgitation is a condition in which there is a backflow of blood in the right atrium and in the systemic venous circulation due to an incompetence of the tricuspid valve. TR has been recognized as an independent risk and prognostic factor, and so as independent from other morbidities. In fact, TR severity is a marker of poor outcome independently from age, LVEF, RVEF and RV size.

Primary/organic→ regurgitation is caused by the presence of a structural damage of the valve’s components, such as the leaflets themselves, the chordae or the annulus.
CIED-related→ regurgitation is caused by the interference of a Cardiovascular Implantable Electronic Device with the normal function of the valve. In fact, patients with these devices should
undergo regular check-ups in order to monitor the eventual development of TR.
Secondary/functional:
- Ventricular→ origins in the right ventricle (ventricular dilation, pulmonary hypertension..)
- Atrial→ origins in the right atrium (atrial fibrillation and other problems arising in the atrium).

47
Q

Etiology, pathophysiology and symptoms of tricuspid regurgitation?

A

Etiology :
- Primary TR—> congenital heart disease, infection/inflammation (rheumatic endocarditis, drugs), other causes (carcinoid, radiations).
- CIED-related TR—> CIED.
- Secondary ventricular TR—> Pre or post capillary pulmonary hypertension, causing hypertension in the RV, RV myopathy (due to DCM, RV infarct, ARVD), RV volume (shunts, high output).
- Secondary atrial TR—> Idiopathic atrial fibrillation.
The functional TR is the most common type of TR (88%); then there is the organic TR (12%), including the CIED-related TR (40% of the ORT).

The blood goes back in the RA and therefore back into the systemic venous circulation causing congestion leading to liver congestion, congestive nephropathy, intestinal congestion and peripheral edema.

Symptoms : Fatigue, liver/gut congestion, right upper quadrant discomfort, dyspepsia, palpitations, fluid retention with leg edema, ascites.

48
Q

Functional tricuspid regurgitation evolutionary stages?

A

Low-mild TR→ annular diameter <40mm, no remodelling of the valve, normal function of the valve.
Therapy : preservation of the valve without surgery.

Moderate TR→ annular diameter >40mm, remodelling of the valve and abnormal coaptation.
Therapy : preservation of the valve and annuloplasty if necessary.

Severe TR→ annular diameter >40mm, remodelling of the valve and no coaptation, complete dysfunction.
Therapy : annuloplasty and leaflet augmentation (even if RV dilation and dysfunction are risk factors for complications during open heart surgery).

49
Q

Diagnoses and physical exam findings of tricuspid regurgitation?

A

Auscultation : At auscultation we may hear a soft, early or holosystolic murmur augmented with respiratory effort (Carvallo’s sign). The murmur in many cases can be unremarkable and difficult to hear, especially in cases of isolated TR. It is important to note that substantial tricuspid regurgitation may exist without the classic auscultatory findings.

ECG : we may see atrial flutter, RV hypertrophy and AFib.

Chest X ray findings include increased RA and RV, decreased pulmonary vascularity, SVC and IVC enlargement.

Lab tests : liver dysfunction can be assess with AST, ALT, GGT and bilirubin. BNP, NT-proBNP are also looked at.

50
Q

What are the different types of mitral valve prolapse?

A

Fibroblastic deficient type : FED, the leaflets are thinned because of absence of collagen fibers.
Barlow disease : variant with thickened leaflet because of uncontrolled deposition of lipopolysaccharides at the level of the valves.