Week 2 CHD/Valular disease Flashcards
- Question: A 68-year-old patient with a history of severe aortic stenosis (AS) and compensated left ventricular hypertrophy is undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery. Intraoperatively, which hemodynamic parameter should be most meticulously managed to avoid exacerbating the patient’s condition?
HR
Avoid tachycardia: reduced diastolic filling time causes poor O2 delivery to thick myocardium
Avoid bradycardia: low CO and inability to compensate with increased SV due to fixed LV space
- Question: A patient with severe mitral regurgitation (MR) due to rheumatic heart disease presents for surgery. During anesthesia, which of the following is a key management strategy?
avoid excess IVF to prevent HF
Avoid bradycardia & high SVR
Maintain forward SV and CO
- Question: In a patient with aortic regurgitation (AR) and left ventricular dilation, which anesthetic management strategy is the least appropriate?
Inducing mild hypotension to reduce regurgitant volume
Least = maintaining low HR
Best = modest increase in HR and modest decrease in SVR
- Question: A 72-year-old patient with chronic aortic stenosis (AS) and concentric left ventricular hypertrophy is scheduled for aortic valve replacement. During the perioperative period, which parameter should be most rigorously controlled?
increased afterload
(bc the hypertrophied heart cannot tolerate the increase SVR)
- Question: A patient with severe mitral stenosis (MS) and atrial fibrillation (AF) is undergoing elective surgery. What is the most critical aspect to manage intraoperatively?
Maintain a controlled, moderate HR
- Question: In a patient with advanced tricuspid regurgitation (TR) and right ventricular (RV) dilation, what is the key anesthetic management strategy?
avoid hypoTN to maintain CPP (use inotropes cautiously)
Maintain intravascular fluid volume and maintain high CVP to facilitate RV preload and RV filling
Avoid high CO2, hypoxia, hypotension → worsen RVF
- Question: For a patient with compensated hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) undergoing non-cardiac surgery, which anesthetic consideration is most critical?
avoid tachycardia
goal is to maintain CO
- Question: During a complex spine surgery, a patient with mixed valvular heart disease (severe aortic stenosis and moderate mitral regurgitation) experiences sudden hypotension. What is the most appropriate initial management step?
immediate use of vasopressor
- Question: A 68-year-old patient with severe aortic regurgitation (AR) is scheduled for elective non-cardiac surgery. Which hemodynamic goal is most critical during surgery?
slightly increased HR to reduce diastolic regurgitant
also avoid abrupt increases in SVR
- Question: In a patient with severe mitral stenosis (MS) and atrial fibrillation (AF), which management strategy is most critical during anesthesia?
maintenance of a controlled, moderate HR
- Question: A patient with compensated hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) is undergoing non-cardiac surgery. Which anesthetic consideration is most critical?
avoid tachycardia
- Question: A 25-year-old patient with a history of unrepaired atrial septal defect (ASD) is scheduled for noncardiac surgery. Which of the following anesthetic considerations is most important?
Avoid air bubbles in all IV lines due to risk for paradoxical emboli
Avoid drop in PVR and increase in SVR
- Question: A patient with a history of ventricular septal defect (VSD) repaired in childhood now presents for elective surgery. Which of the following findings on preoperative evaluation would be most concerning?
evidence of RV hypertrophy
- Question: During the anesthesia for a patient with Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), which of the following interventions is most likely to decrease the right-to-left shunt?
increasing SVR
- Question: A patient with Eisenmenger syndrome is undergoing a non-cardiac surgery. What is the most appropriate strategy for fluid management in this patient?
Balance fluid administration with close monitoring of hemodynamics
- Question: In managing a patient with transposition of the great arteries (TGA) repaired with an atrial switch procedure, which of the following is a key anesthetic consideration?
vigilant monitoring for bradycardia d/t SA node dysfunction
- Question: A 30-year-old patient with a history of L-TGA (Levo-Transposition of the Great Arteries) is undergoing a major abdominal surgery. Which of the following considerations is most critical in the anesthetic management of this patient?
vigilant monitoring for systemic ventricular arrhythmias
- Question: In a patient with coarctation of the aorta, what is the primary anesthetic goal during non-cardiac surgery?
ensuring adequate cerebral perfusion pressure
- Question: A 20-year-old patient with a history of congenital aortic stenosis, who had a balloon valvuloplasty in childhood, presents for elective orthopedic surgery. Which of the following is the most critical anesthetic consideration for this patient?
strict avoidance of tachycardia to reduce myocardial oxygen demand
- Question: A 35-year-old patient with a history of Marfan syndrome and aortic root replacement is undergoing a laparoscopic procedure. What is the most important anesthetic consideration in this case?
strict control of blood pressure to avoid stress on the aortic root
- Question: A 30-year-old patient with a history of unrepaired ventricular septal defect (VSD) is scheduled for non-cardiac surgery. Which of the following anesthetic considerations is most critical in this patient?
Maintenance of systemic vascular resistance to avoid exacerbation of left-to-right shunt