Valvular Heart Disease-Assessment Exam 2 Flashcards
What percent of people have valvular disease in the US?
2.5%
What do you usually see with valvular heart disease?
Hemodynamic burden on the left or right ventricle
Pressure overload
Volume overload
Valvular heart disease coexists with what?
IHD
What two valvular diseases produce pressure overload?
Mitral stenosis
Aortic stenosis
What two valvular diseases produce volume overload?
Mitral regurg
Aortic regurgitation
50% of pts with aortic stenosis >50 years have what?
Ischemic heart disease
CAD pts with mitral or aortic valve disease ____ long term prognosis
Worsens
When assessing valvular disease, what are you looking for?
- Severity of cardiac disease
- Degree of impaired myocardial contractility
- Presence of associated major organ system disease
What are compensatory mechanisms in someone with valve disease?
- increased SNS
- myocardial hypertrophy
- current therapy
It’s important to evaluate and define ______ and _______ in valve disease pts
Exercise tolerance
Cardiac Reserve
Classification of pts with heart disease chart
Angina pectoris causes what?
Increased myocardial O2 demand
Ventricular hypertrophy
What symptoms will you get with impaired myocardial contractility?
Dyspnea/orthopnea
Easy fatiguability
Heart failure
- Basilar rales
- JVD
- 3rd heart sound
An increase in SNS (compensatory) will cause:
- Anxiety
- diaphoresis
- resting tachycardia
Causes of heart murmurs:
- Turbulent blood flow across abnormal valves
- Increased flow across normal valves
______ of the murmur in the cardiac cycle is the most important
Timing
(mid systolic vs holosystolic vs diastolic)
Distinguishing ________ murmurs from ________ murmurs due to structural heart disease is important because the presence of heart disease can change perioperative management and patient outcomes.
Functional
Pathologic
What are the characteristics we need to identify of a murmur?
Timing
Location
Radiation
Intensity
What is a functional murmur?
a heart murmur that is primarily due to physiologic conditions outside the heart, as opposed to structural defects in the heart itself.
midsystolic murmur can be ______ whereas any other murmur is very likely _______ and requires TTE
Functional
Pathologic
What happens during systole?
Aortic and pulmonic valves: open
Mitral and tricuspid valves: closed
What are characteristics of a systolic murmur?
- Stenosis of the aortic or pulmonic valves
- Incompetence of the mitral or tricuspid valves
What happens during diastole?
Aortic and pulmonic valves: closed
Mitral and tricuspid valves: open
What are characteristics of a diastolic murmur?
- Stenosis of the mitral or tricuspid valves
- Incompetence of the aortic or pulmonic valves
What are characteristics of a mid systolic murmur?
- Occur between distinct S1 and S2 heart sounds
- Crescendo–decrescendo pattern
- Can be functional