Chapter 27 Disorders of Cardiac Function Part A
Which of the following condition will result in pathological changes arising from pulseless electrical activity A. pericardial effusion B. Cardiac tamponade C. Pericarditis
C pericarditis
Describe idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy
a transverse section of enlarged heart reveals dilation of both ventricles, and although the ventricular wall appears to be thin there is considerable hypertrophy
What is the ECG change for zone of necrosis
abnormal Q
This represents the spectrum of ischemic coronary disease ranging from unstable angina through myocardial infarction
acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
______ is a group of conditions due to decreased blood flow in the coronary arteries such that part of the _____ is unable to function properly or dies
acute coronary syndrome (ACS), heart muscle
What is the pathogenesis of pericardial effusion
acute or chronic accumulation of fluid
_____ is the force or load against which the heart has to contract to eject blood out of the aorta
after load
What is pleuritic pain with pericarditis
aggravated by inspiration and coughing
______ is chest pain or discomfort when your heart muscle does not get enough oxygen rich blood such as with CAD
angina
What is the atypical chest pain in women relieved by
antacids
Gross pathology of rheumatic heart disease causes
aortic stenosis which causes fused aortic valve leaflets from above
Which area is affected by left anterior descending coronary artery obstruction
area below left ventricle
_____ and other ______ can be used for treatment of pericarditis
aspirin, NSAIDs
What is the most common cause of coronary artery disease
atherosclerosis
_______ refers to the build up of fats, cholesterol, and other substances in an on your artery walls which can constrict blood flow
atherosclerosis
What are the causes of stable angina
atherosclerosis > ischemia
Less blood in chronic ischemia heart disease is due to _____ and _____
atherosclerosis and vasospasm
What ECG changes is seen with necrosis
depressed Q, elevated ST segment
What ECG changes do we see with ischemia
depressed T wave
This is the leading indication for heart transplantation and is many times genetic
dilated cardiomyopathy
A person with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is prone to ______, and may suffer _______
heart failure, sudden death during exertion
What is the most common cause of cardiac death in young athletes
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Decreased tissue perfusion is related to ________ secondary to the presence of _________ within the coronary arteries
inadequate blood flow, plaques
_______ is a valve that is unable to close completely
incompetent or regurgitant valve
How do we compensate for mitral valve regurgitation
increase heart rate
What is the treatment for acute MI
increase myocardial oxygen supply to promote vasodilation
What is the pain like in NSTEMI
increase onset, intensity, and duration than angina
What happens since the right ventricle cannot accept enough blood in pericardial effusion
increased venous pressure because of back up and jugular distension
_____ can lead to irreversible cellular damage & muscle death or necrosis
infarction
What is myocarditis
inflammation of the myocardium, causing the wall of the heart to become thick and swollen
The treatment for pericarditis is medication that address ______, alleviate _______, and stop _______
inflammation, pain, inflammatory process
Pericardial effusion in the pericardial cavity is usually a result of ______ or ______, ______, and ______
inflammatory, infectious process, trauma, cardiac surgery
During _____, venous flow into the right side of the heart _______, causing the ________ to bulge into the left ventricle.
inspiration, increases, inter-ventricular septum
______ can lead to reversible cellular damage
ischemia
______ is not severe enough to cause sufficient MI damage, but does cause acute decrease in blood flow in unstable angina
ischemia
What happens with a NSTEMI
ischemia is severe enough to cause sufficient myocardial damage
Which artery is known as the "widow maker"
left anterior descending artery
Where is the acute myocardial infarction pain for women
left chest, abdomen, back, or arm (not mid chest)
Describe the pathogenesis of STEMI
lipid accumulation and platelet attraction (extensice)
Describe the pathogenesis of non-STEMI
lipid accumulation, small thrombus, and lots of platelets attraction
What is the etiology and clinical manifestations of pericarditis
long-term inflammation from mediastinal radiation, cardiac surgery, or infection
______ is genetic and more common in females
mitral valve prolapse
Describe the chest pain in STEMI
more prolonged that angina
What do we hear with a stethoscope with valve regurgitation
murmur of blood leaking back through when it should be close
What is heard with arterial stenosis
murmur of blood shooting through narrow opening when valve is open
What is dilated cardiomyopathy
muscle fibers in the heart have been stretched too far and the heart chambers are enlarged continuously (don't expand and relax)
A myocardial infarction that is "tomb stoning" is associated with extensive _______, reduced ________, and serious ______ and poor _______
myocardial damage, left ventricle function, hospital complications, prognosis
Coronary heart disease can result in ______
myocardial infarctions
Acute ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) is associated with _______
myocardial necrosis
______ is the amount of oxygen the heart requires to maintain optimal function
myocardial oxygen demand
_____ is the amount of oxygen supplied to the heart by the blood vessels which is controlled by the coronary arteries
myocardial oxygen supply
In the precordial area with pericarditis the pain can radiate to ______, _______, ______, or _______
neck, back (trapezius muscle), abdomen, or side
______/______ can be done to resolve cardiac tamponade and pericardial effusion
needle aspiration and pericardiocentesis
What are the ECG patterns of NSTEMI
non-ST elevation or T-wave inversion
_____ involves myocardial perfusion imaging, infarct imaging, radionuclide angiocardiography, and positron emission tomography
nuclear cardiovascular imaging methods
This is an "incompetent" valve
regurgitation
This is when blood leaks back through valve because it is not closed all the way
regurgitation
Chest pain in women is not relieved by ______ and _______
rest and NTG
STEMI is not relieved by ______, ______, or _____
rest, nitroglycerin, morfinsulfate
Inflammation of pericardium may _____ heart movement
restrict
What does a CABG involve
revascularization of the affected myocardium
What is the primary cause of valve stenosis
rheumatic fever and also calcification
This can also not accept enough blood in pericardial effusion
right ventricle
In constrictive pericarditis ______ contracts and interferes with ______ and, and ______ becomes fixed
scar tissue, diastolic filling, cardiac reserve
What causes the chest pain (and fever) with pericarditis
secondary to inflammation (secondary to pericarditis)
A new onset unstable angina is more _______ with ______ pain, and is more ______ than previously experienced unstable angina
severe, worsening, prolonged
The chest pain felt with pericarditis is _____ and ______
sharp and abrupt onset
Chest pain in women is ______, _______, _________, very _________, and unrelated to ________
sharp, fleeting, repetitive, very prolonged, and exercise
What is possible with pericardial effusion
shock
Which area is affected by left circumflex coronary artery obstruction
side of left ventricle
________ occurs in the absence of anginal pain and is caused by impaired blood flow
silent myocardial ischemia
What decreases the chest pain of pericarditis
sitting and leaning forward
Describe the pathogenesis of unstable angina (slide 61)
small lipid accumulation and small thrombus
Which area is affected by right coronary artery obstruction (slide 38)
space between right and left ventricles
Which type of angina is brought by exercise or stress
stable
_____ this is in which signs and symptoms don't vary, they don't get worse with decreased blood flow to the heart (CAD)
stable angina
What happens with stable angina and (CAD)
stable fixed atherosclerotic plaque doesn't progressively get bigger after a certain point and the symptoms of angina do not get progressively worse
Unstable angina has prolonged ______ and it not relieved by ______
symptoms, meds
Describe mammary artery bypass graft
the mammary artery is anastomosed to the descending branch of the left coronary artery, bypassing the obstructing lesion
Describe the saphenous vein bypass graft
the vein segment of the saphenous vein is sutured to the ascending aorta and the right coronary artery at a point distal to the occluding lesion
What happens with acute pericarditis
the viral/ bacterial infection causes an inflammatory process that results in vasodilation, increase capillary permeability, and increase in wbcs (inflammatory response) causing exudate (fluid) to accumulate in the pericardial cavity causing pericardial effusion
Describe the pathogenesis of CAD
there is an imbalance between oxygen supply and oxygen demand needs, which threatens the myocardial function because of decreased oxygen
Describe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
there is disproportionate thickening of inter-ventricular septum causes intermittent left ventricular outflow obstruction
What happens as a result of streptococcus antibodies attack glycoproteins in the heart
-the endocardium is thickened and has an overlying vegetation -vegetation of valves (aortic valve cusps) -evidence of left ventricle hypertrophy
What results from the imbalance of oxygen supply and demand of the heart
decreased tissue perfusion
Less than 5 years after an acute myocardial infarction more women than men will suffer from ______, or _____
heart failure, stroke
What are the ECG changes with pericarditis
wide spread ST-segment (ST elevation) and PR depression segment
The symptoms of STEMI for ______ are usually atypical
women
Who has atypical chest pain with a myocardial infarction
women
Less than one year after an acute myocardial infarction more _____ will die compared to ______
women, men
How do you rule out an MI
you monitor troponin I levels, check at 4, 8, and 8 hours following the onset of signs and symptoms and two negative results suggests no myocardial infarction
When listening with stethoscope to someone with pericarditis it sounds ______ and ______ due to
"leathery", "scratchy", rubbing and friction between the inflamed pericardial surfaces
What are the serum cardiac markers for an acute MI
(proteins released from necrotic heart cells) -myoglobin, creatine kinase, troponin
What do women usually experience with a STEMI
-GI distress, nausea, vomiting (pain severity and vagal stimulation) -Tachycardia -anxiety, restlessness, and feeling of impending doom
What are the procedures for treatment of acute MI
-Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) - non - surgical: stent -Coronary Angioplasty (balloon-expandable stent insertion)
Secondary cardio myopathies are associated with/ may be linked to
-alcohol or other drugs, catecholamines (pheochromocytoma), diphtheria, beriberi (thiamine defiency), and various chemicals
Ischemia may cause:
-angina -heart attack -cardiac arrhythmias -conduction deficits -heart failure -sudden death
What are the aortic valve disorders
-aortic valve stenosis -aortic valve regurgitation
What would be looked for in a chest x-ray for pericarditis
-cardiomegaly (enlarged heart) -clear lungs (no pneumonia -- clear lung fields)
What are the signs and symptoms of acute myocardial infarction
-chest discomfort -arm or back discomfort -neck or jaw discomfort -trouble breathing with or without chest discomfort -feeling light headed or breaking into a cold sweat -feeling sick or discomfort in your stomach
What are the manifestations of acute myocardial infarction
-chest pain (angina) -severe, crushing, or like "heart burn" -"gas" -heavy or mild pressure -viselike, constricted -referred pain
What laboratory result can be indicative of pericarditis
-elevated sedimentation rate and a C-reactive protein (inflammatory markers) -high wbc count (suggestive of infection)
Map the flow of blood through the heart
-enters through the superior and inferior vena cava into the right atrium -pass through tricuspid valve into the right ventricle -pass through the pulmonary valve and blood leaves the heart via pulmonary arteries -goes to lungs to get oxygenated -blood comes back to the heart through the pulmonary veins and enters the left atrium -goes through the mitral valve to enter the left ventricle -blood then goes through the aortic valve to enter the aorta and leave the heart via the aorta
What are the coronary artery disease (CAD) risk factors
-history of heart disease -high cholesterol and high levels of triglycerides -hypetension -cigarette smoking -diabetes -men age 45 yrs older, women 55 and older -family history of heart disease -obesity
Why is silent myocardial ischemia asymptomatic
-history of myocardial infarct and continue to have silent ischemia -people with angina continue to have silent ischemia
What are the functions of the pericardium
-isolates the heart from other thoracic structures -maintains its position in the thorax -prevents it from overfilling -contributes to the coupling of the distensibility between the two ventricles during diastole; they both fill equally
What are the mitral valve disorders
-mitral valve stenosis -mitral valve regurgitation -mitral valve prolapse
What is the sympathetic nervous system response to acute myocardial infarction
-tachycardia -anxiety, restlessness, feeling of impeding doom -may be precipitated by activity or emotions -GI distress, nausea, vomiting -hypotension and shock: weakness in arms and legs
What are the two broad disorders of CAD
1. Acute coronary syndrome 2. Chronic ischemia heart disease
What are the components of the classical triad for pericarditis
1. Chest pain 2. ECG changes 3. Pericardial friction rub (a heart sound)
What are the primary cardiomyopathies
1. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy 2. Dilated cardiomyopathy 3. Myocarditis
What are the mechanical complications of a myocardial infarct
1. Papillary muscle rupture (making for heart murmur) 2. Interventricular septum rupture 3. Rupture of the free wall of the left ventricle with pseudoaneurysm formation
What are the two types of valve defects
1. Stenosis 2. Regurgitation
What are the diseases under the heart disease "umbrella"
1. coronary artery disease 2. arrhythmias 3. congenital heart defects, valve disorders
Pericardial effusion is the accumulation of fluid in the pericardial space exceeding the typical ____ to ____ cc
15 to 50
What is the duration of stable angina
3-5 minutes
Manifestation of acute myocardial infarction are virtually silent until artery is approximately _____ percent blocked by plaque
40%
troponin I has a ____% sensitivity and _____% specificty for _____ hours following signs and symptoms
90, 95, 8
Which of the following may result in the development of a cardiomyopathy A. Valvular stenosis B. Valvular regurgitation C. MI D. Ischemia E. All the above F. None of the above
E
____ evaluates changes in the pattern or orientation of wave forms
ECG
Unstable angina may or may not have _______
ECG changes
This an an infection of the inner heart surfaces, and characterized by the invasion of heart valves
Endocarditis Disorders
Describe coronary angioplasty
Insertion of a guide catheter with a collapsed ballon-expandable stent mounted over a guide wire into a coronary artery, advancement of guide wire across the coronary lesion, positioning of the ballon expandable stent across the lesion, ballon inflation with deployment of the stent is expanded, the ballon system is removed
Describe silent myocardial ischemia
MI without anginal pain; reason unclear (may have differences in pain threshold, also see with Diabetics with neuropathy)
What is the acute treatment for acute MI
MONA Morphine oxygen nitroglycerine aspirin (to prevent clots)
What does NSTEMI stand for
Non-ST Elevation myocardial infarction
What do elders experience with a STEMI
SOB more frequently than chest pain
What are the ECG changes for acute MI
ST segment elevation
What is the ECG change for zone of injury
ST-segment depression or elevation
With this there is complete narrowing of the lumen
STEMI
silent ______ compromises a significant proportion of all ______ in older adults, and they are painless
STEMI, STEMI
What is the ECG changes for zone of ischemia
T wave inversion
What ECG changes are seen in acute coronary syndrome
T-wave inversion, ST segment elevation (or depression); abnormal Q wave
How is stable angina typically relieved
Upon relief of precipitating factors/ rest
What is valve prolapse
Valve everts and blood flows the wrong direction.
What is another name for the mitral valve
bicuspid valve
When placing a stent in the left anterior descending coronary artery what happens
blood supply to the front wall of the heart is restored to normal
What do the alterations in hemodynamic function of aortic valve stenosis, mitral valve stenosis, mitral valve regurgitation, and aortic valve regurgitation cause
blood to be back up into the left ventricle making for hypertrophied heart muscle that can lead to heart failure
Pericardial effusion affects _____; symptoms of ________
cardiac function, cardiac compression
There are no changes of _______ in unstable angina
cardiac markers
_______ looks at serum cardiac markers in acute coronary syndromes
cardiac panel
Pericardial effusion can cause ______
cardiac tamponade
Pericardial effusion can lead to
cardiac tamponade
Rapid accumulation of exudate compresses the heart causing _______
cardiac tamponade
This is slow or rapid compression of the heart due to accumulation of fluid, pus, or blood in the pericardial sac
cardiac tamponade
In _______, the fluid in the pericardial sac produces further compression of the left ventricle, causing an exaggeration of the normal inspiratory decrease in ______ and _______
cardiac tamponade, stroke volume, systolic blood pressure
_______ are disorders of heart muscle
cardiomyopathies
Describe endocarditis from rheumatic fever (rheumatic heart disease)
caused by streptococcus infection indirectly; antibodies to Strep attack glycoproteins of the heart, skin and joint
What are the cause of valve regurgitations
causes range from rheumatic fever, endocarditis, and congenital defects
What happens with variant angina
chest pain occurring almost exclusively at rest, related to coronary artery spasm with subsequent myocardial ischemia
_______ is the inability of coronary arteries to supply blood to meet metabolic demands of heart
chronic ischemic heart disease
_____________, ____________, ____________, are involved in chronic ischemic heart disease
chronic stable angina, silet myocardial ischemia, variant or vasospastic angina
Pain with stable angina maintains a ______ threshold in severity
constant
This is a consequence of pericarditis
constrictive pericarditis
What does CABG stand for
coronary artery bypass graft
_______ is the most common type of heart disease >370,000 deaths a year
coronary heart disease
During inspiration the inter-ventricular septum bulges into the left ventricle producing a _______________, with a subsequent ____________
decrease left ventricular volume, decrease in stroke volume output
What is the overall feeling of STEMI
discomfort
_____ involves m-mode, two-dimensional, Doppler, and esophaheal
echocardiogram
What ECG changes do we see with injury
elevated ST wave
There is a higher O2 demand with ______ and _____
exercise and cold
_____ is a motorized treadmill and bicycle ergometer
exercise stress testing
What are the precipitating factors of stable angina
exertion, stress
Fluid in pericardial cavity restricts heart ______, causing the _____ to not be able to accept enough blood, this causes a _______ of cardiac output, and a _____ blood pressure
expansion, left ventricle, decrease, increase
_____, _____,_____, or ______ constricts the heart in pericardial effusion
exudate, fluid, pus, or blood
What happens with constrictive pericarditis
fibrous, calcified scar tissue develops between the visceral and parietal layers of the serous pericardium
Pericardial friction rub is the result of _______ between inflamed layers of the pericardium when the heart moves within the ________
friction, pericardial sac
Cardiomyopathies can be ______, _______, ______
genetic, acquired, mixed (both)
What happens with valve stenosis
harder to force blood through the valve
This is leading cause of death in the United States (30% of deaths worldwide)
heart disease
Describe pulsus paradoxus
on inhaling, right ventricles fills with blood, because heart cannot expand fully when the right ventricle is filled, the left ventricle is compressed and cannot accept much blood. On the next heart beat, the left ventricle does not send out much blood causing the systolic blood pressure to decrease
This remains the same with chronic stable angina
onset, duration, intensity
What increases the chest pain of pericarditis
orthopnea (SOB when lying down)
Cells that have hypertrophied need more ______ and perform less ______
oxygen, efficiently
What is unusual with chronic stable angina
pain at rest
Describe chronic stable angina
pain usually when heart's oxygen demand increases; fixed coronary obstruction
Describe variant/vasospastic angina
pain when coronary arteries spasm (cause not understood)
With unstable angina there is ______ at rest and with _______, lasting 20 minutes if untreated with _______
pain, minimal exertion, NTG
Women tend to have _______ without chest pain during acute myocardial infarction
palpations
This is attached to the great vessels and is the outer fibrous layer of the heart
parietal pericardium
What is variant/ vasospastic angina also known as
parinzmetal's
Medications for chronic stable angina can be timed to provide ______
peak effect
The two layers of the pericardium are separated by the ________, with _____ ml of serous fluid
pericardial cavity, 50
Pericarditis leads to _______ that is life threatening
pericardial effusion
The complication of pericarditis is
pericardial effusion
This is LIFE THREATENING
pericardial effusion
This is the accumulation of fluid in the pericardial cavity
pericardial effusion
What is the most common finding of pericarditis
pericardial friction rub (a heart sound)
This is an acute inflammatory process of the pericardium and it can be acute, chronic, or constrictive
pericarditis
Differentiate pericarditis from MI
pericarditis is the inflammation of the pericardium and MI is the death of heart tissue as a result of ischemia (decreased blood flow)
This is a double layered serous membrane
pericardium
What is the treatment for the blockage of the left anterior descending artery
placing a stent to facilitate blood flow
_____ is the initial stretching of cardiac myocytes prior to contraction, related to ventricular filling
pre load
Stable angina pain has a ______ pattern
predictable
_____ and ______ may be the result of broken chordinae tendineae
prolapse and regurgitation
Chest pain in unstable angina is more _______ than angina and have no ________
prolonged, predictable pattern
This is a diagnostic feature in tamponade
pulsus paradoxus
_______ is the term used to describe an exaggerated blood pressure variation with the respiratory cycle....This hemodynamic effect of a large pericardial effusion causing cardiac tamponade is referred to as
pulsus paradoxus, pulsus paradoxus
The key to fixing the widow maker is to fix it
quick and properly
What happens with plaques in regards to acute coronary syndrome
there is plaque disruption and platelets aggregate to the plaque which then can lead to a big thrombus by attracting more platelets making for larger disruption of blood flow to the heart (unstable angina)
Where does pain from angina radiate
to the neck, shoulders, inner aspect of arms, center of back
"______" is ST elevation, and depressed Q wave
tomb stoning
In variant angina there are ______ ECG changes
transient
What are the proteins released from necrotic heart cells
troponin I and T (only in cardiac muscle), myoglobin, creatine kinase (CK-MB)
_____ and _____ are preferred as they have the highest _____ and _______ for the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction
troponin I, T, sensitivity, specificity
What are the elevated cardiac markers in NSTEMI
troponins, creatine kinase (CK-MB) myoglobin
True or False: mitral (bicuspid) valve regurgitation results in diminished stroke volume
true: if the mitral valve does not close as it should, a portion of the stroke volume leaks back into left atrium, decreasing the amount of blood that is ejected during the beat
Why is silent myocardial ischemia painless
unknown
What does idiopathic mean
unknown cause
This is not relieved by rest or NTG/MS
unstable angina
What do we treat as an emergency because it could be a sign of impeding myocardial infarction
unstable angina
What is progressive, crescendo angina, pre-infarction angina
unstable angina
Acute ischemia heart diseases range from ________ to _______
unstable ischemia, acute MI
Describe valve regurgitation
valve is not closing completely
Describe valve stenosis
valve will not open all the way; flaps thicken or fuse
This usually occurs during rest
variant/vasospastic angina
What effect does NTG have
vasodilating
What is the most common cause of acute pericarditis
viral and bacterial infections
Myocarditis is usually associated with
viral infections
This adheres to the epicardium and is the thin inner layer on the outside the heart
visceral pericardium
Defects in contractile proteins of the heart makes cells _____, cells will then ____ to do the same amount of work as normal cells in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
weak, hypertrophy