Valvular Heart Disease
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Transcript Valvular Heart Disease
Heart Murmurs &
Valvular Heart Disease
Victor Politi, M.D., FACP
Medical Director, SVCMC,
School of Allied Health
Professions, Physician
Assistant Program
What is a Heart Murmur?
A sound produced as blood flows through
the chambers and large blood vessels of
the heart during the cardiac cycle of
contraction and relaxation.
What is a Heart Murmur?
The heart beat normally makes two
sounds:
the first is Lub and the second is Dub, these
two sounds follow each other (Lub Dub) and
are not separated by any extra sounds.
What is a Heart Murmur?
A heart murmur will be heard as a
swishing or a whistling sound in addition
to the normal Lub-Dub sound.
The moving blood sounds like running
water in a garden hose.
What is a Heart Murmur?
A heart murmur is not a diagnosis or
disease, it is a sign to alert our attention
to check if there is anything wrong.
Heart murmurs come in different sounds
which may help indicate whether the
murmur is normal or abnormal.
What is a Heart Murmur?
Some murmurs are benign or harmless
and are more of a finding than a
condition.
A benign murmur is not associated with
any significant underlying abnormality of
the heart or its vessels.
What is a Heart Murmur?
Many young people can have
benign/innocent flow murmurs and still
have normal cardiac structure and
function.
What causes a heart murmur?
Innocent/Benign Murmur Causes:
Anemia
Fever
Venous Hum
a common innocent murmur heard during
childhood. This murmur is heard as a soft
humming sound at the base of the neck just
above the collarbone. It results from the normal
blood flow in the large neck veins (jugular veins).
Innocent/benign Causes:
Venous Hum
Light compression of the neck vein will
make the murmur transiently disappear, or
the murmur will sound louder when
turning the child's head to one side or
another.
These simple maneuvers help differentiate
a Venous Hum from the murmurs
resulting from heart disease.
Innocent/benign Causes:
Still’s Murmur
This heart murmur is named after the doctor who
described it.
It is heard most frequently in active, healthy 3 to 7-year
old children.
The murmur represents the normal sound of blood
gushing out into the aorta during heart contraction.
It has a musical tone to it and thus is frequently
described as "musical murmur"; it usually sounds softer
during sitting and may sound very loud during fever,
anxiety, or exercise.
Still’s Murmur
Pathologic Murmur
A pathologic heart murmur is one
associated with a structural or functional
abnormality of the heart.
Pathologic Murmurs
Narrow Valve- stenosis
Valve insufficiency/regurgitation
Septal defects- Hole in the Heart
Valve
insufficiency/regurgitation
As the heart valve closes some blood leaks back
making a blowing sound.
A leaking valve is called insufficient or
regurgitating.
Its importance depends on how much blood is
leaking, what valve is involved, and how long it
has been going on.
Septal defects – hole in heart
If the pressure in the heart chambers is not the
same, the blood will flow from the high to the lowpressure chamber, producing a murmur sounding like
a waterfall.
If the hole is small, it will make a very loud sound.
If the hole is large it may make a faint murmur that
may go unnoticed for some time; therefore a faint
murmur may sometimes indicate a serious problem.
Septal defects – hole in heart
If it is between the upper cardiac
chambers, it is called Atrial Septal Defect
(ASD), and is called Ventricular Septal
Defect (VSD) if it is between the lower
cardiac chambers.
The importance of septal defects depends
on their size and site.
Mechanisms of Heart
Murmurs
Most murmurs are produced as blood
flows past the cardiac valves, which
separate the chambers of the heart, or
through the valves that lead to the great
vessels of the lungs and the systemic
circulation.
Mechanisms of Heart
Murmurs
They are usually caused by one of the following
mechanisms:
Flow across partial obstruction (e.g. aortic stenosis)
Flow across valvular or intravascular irregularity w/o
obstruction (e.g. bicuspid aortic valve w/o true
stenosis)
Increased flow through normal structures (e.g. aortic
systolic murmur associated w/anemia)
Mechanisms of Heart
Murmurs
Flow into dilated chamber (e.g. aortic systolic
murmur associated w/aneurysmal dilatation
of the ascending aorta)
Backward or regurgitant flow across an
incompetent valve or defect (e.g. mitral
regurgitation)
Shunting of blood out of a high pressure
chamber or artery through abnormal passage
(e.g. ventricular septal defect)
Midsystolic Ejection Murmurs
Most common type of murmur
May be:
1. Organic
(i.e. secondary to structural cardiovascular abnormality)
2. Functional
(i.e. secondary to a physiologic alteration w/or w/o heart
dx)
3. Innocent
(i.e. not associated with any functional or structural
abnormality)
Midsystolic Ejection Murmurs
Organic causes include:
Aortic stenosis
Pulmonoic stenosis
Pansystolic Regurgitant
Murmurs
Heard when blood flows from a chamber
of high pressure to one of lower pressure
through a valve or other structure that
should be closed.
Regurgitation (incompetence or
insufficiency) means there is a leak!
Pansystolic Regurgitant
Murmurs
The murmur begins immediately with the
1st heart sound and continues up to the
2nd heart sound.
Causes include:
Mitral regurgitation LV LA
Tricuspid regurgitation RV
RA
Ventricular septal defect LV RV
Diastolic Murmurs
Unlike systolic murmurs, diastolic murmurs are
almost always indicative of heart disease.
Two general types may be distinguished:
The diastolic rumble originating in atrioventricular
valves
The early diastolic murmurs of semilunar valve
incompetence
Diastolic Murmurs
Diastolic rumbling murmurs are caused
by:
Flow across distorted or stenotic mitral or
tricuspid valves
Increased blood flow across normal mitral or
tricuspid valves
Diastolic Murmurs
Because these valves open only after the
aortic and pulmonic valves close, a short
period of silence separates S2 from the
beginning of diastolic rumbles.
These murmurs are low in pitch, rumbling
in quality, and heard best with the bell of
the stethoscope in light skin contact.
Diastolic Murmurs
Semilunar valve incompetence may result
either from valvular deformity or from
dilatation of the valvular ring.
In either case blood regurgitates from the
great vessel back into the ventricle.
Diastolic Murmurs
Murmurs of aortic regurgitation, together with
most murmurs of pulmonic regurgitation, start
immediately after the second sound and then
diminish in intensity
In contrast to the rumbling atrioventricular valve
murmurs, they are high pitched and blowing
and best heard with the diaphragm pressed
firmly on the chest.
Diastolic Murmurs
The most common examples of these two
types of diastolic murmurs are:
Mitral stenosis
Aortic regurgitation
Points to Remember !
If the flow is excessive or turbulent, a murmur may be
manifest.
Blood flowing through a tight valve will produce a
murmur.
Blood that is leaking back across an improperly sealing
valve also can cause a murmur.
Occasionally, abnormal communications (holes) between
chambers of the heart can result in the presence of a
murmur.
Diagnosing a Murmur
Diagnosing a heart murmur begins with
auscultation of the heart.
The location, quality, pitch and variation in
the sound are all important clues to
whether the murmur is benign or
pathologic.
Murmur Evaluation
One of the most useful tests in evaluating
a murmur is an echocardiogram.
Other tests –
EKG
Chest x-ray
Valvular Heart Disease
90% of valvular disease is chronic, with
decades between the onset of the
structural abnormality and symptoms
The four heart valves prevent retrograde
flow of blood during the cardiac cycle,
allowing efficient ejection of blood with
each contraction of the cardiac chambers
The mitral valve has two cusps, while the
other three heart valves normally have
three cusps
The right and left papillary muscles
promote effective closure of the tricuspid
and mitral valves, respectively.
Valvular Heart Disease
Mitral Stenosis
Mitral Regurgitation
Aortic Stenosis
Aortic Regurgitation
Tricuspid Stenosis
Tricuspid Regurgitation
Mitral Stenosis
Mitral StenosisPathophysiology
Despite its declining frequency, rheumatic
heart disease is still the most common
cause of mitral valve stenosis
Due to progressive dilation of the atria,
many patients with mitral stenosis will go
on to develop atrial fibrillation
Mitral Stenosis
Normal mitral valve 4-6cm2
When the valve narrows <1.5cm2, left
atrial pressure must rise to maintain
normal flow across the valve and a normal
cardiac output
This results in a pressure difference
between the left atrium and the left
ventricle during diastole
Mitral Stenosis
In mild cases of mitral stenosis, the
patient may be asymptomatic and cardiac
output and left atrial pressure may be
normal
In moderate cases (valve area < 1.5cm2)
as left atrial pressure rises - dyspnea and
fatigue appear
Mitral Stenosis
With severe stenosis, pulmonary venous
congestion at rest and reduced cardiac
output occur resulting in dyspnea, fatigue,
and right sided heart failure
Mitral Stenosis Clinical Findings
Dyspnea
In 80% of cases, most common presenting
symptom
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
hemoptysis
2nd most common symptom
Orthopnea
Symptoms often precipitated by onset of
pregnancy or atrial fibrillation
Mitral Stenosis Clinical Findings
Murmur
duration varies - severity of stenosis & heart
rate
middiastolic rumble, crescendos into S2
Heart Sounds
long snapping S1
apical impulse is small and tapping due to
underfilled left ventricle
Mitral Stenosis - Murmur
The pressure gradient and the length of
the diastolic murmur reflect the severity of
mitral stenosis
Mitral Stenosis
Diagnostic Studies
Echocardiography
reveals thickened valve that opens poorly,
closes slowly
rather than moving in opposite directions,
the anterior and posterior leaflets are fixed,
moving together
rule out atrial myxoma (clinical presentation
similar to mitral stenosis)
left atrial size can be accurately measured
increased size - increased risk of atrial fibrillation
Mitral Stenosis Diagnostic Studies
ECG
may show notched or diphasic P waves and
right axis deviation
X-ray
early finding- straightening of left heart
border (left atrial enlargement)
subsequent findings - pulmonary congestion,
redistribution of flow to upper lung fields,
Kerley B lines, along with an increase in
vascular markings
Kerley B lines are short, horizontal linear radiopacities at the periphery
of the lung that represent thickened, interlobular septa
Mitral Stenosis Treatment
Warfarin anticoagulation - after A-Fib
Surgery - indications
uncontrolled pulmonary edema
limiting dyspnea & intermittent pulmonary edema
pulmonary HTN w/right ventricular hypertrophy or
hemoptysis
limitation of activity despite ventricular rate
control/medical therapy
recurrent systemic embolic despite anticoagulation
w/moderate-severe stenosis
Mitral Stenosis
Treatment
Open mitral commissurotomy
patients w/o substantial mitral regurgitation
Valve replacement surgery
indicated when combined stenosis and
insufficiency are present or when the mitral
valve is so distorted and calcified that a
satisfactory valvulotomy is impossible
Mitral Stenosis
Prosthetic valves
Warfarin anticoagulant therapy required usually for at least initial 3 months with
bioprosthesis - if atrial fibrillation persists anticoagulation therapy should continue
possible problems
thrombosis
paravalvular leak
endocarditis
degenerative changes in tissue valves
Mitral Stenosis
Treatment
Balloon valvuloplasty
effective in patients w/o mitral regurgitation
and in cases where valve calcification is not
excessive
Mitral Regurgitation
(Mitral Insufficiency)
(Mitral Incompetence)
Mitral Regurgitation
The mitral leaflets do not close normally
during left ventricular systole, blood is
ejected into the left atrium as well as
through the aortic valve
this results in increased volume load on
the left atria
Mitral Regurgitation
Mitral Regurgitation leads to left atrial
enlargement - subsequently resulting in
atrial fibrillation
Mitral Regurgitation
Case presentation varies depending upon
the speed with which the condition
develops
In acute cases, left atrial pressure
elevates abruptly
can result in pulmonary edema if severe
Mitral Regurgitation
Acute cases
Typically, patient presents with dyspnea,
tachycardia, and pulmonary edema
ECG-may show evidence of acute inferior
wall infarction (more common than anterior
wall)
absent to minor calcification of mitral valve
no stenosis, little left ventricle dilation
X-ray-minimally enlarged left atrium,
pulmonary edema - from papillary muscle
Mitral Regurgitation
In chronic cases, the left atrium dilates, left
atrial pressure rises little, even with large
regurgitant flow
slowly progressive- years to decades
exertional dyspnea (1st symptom), and fatigue that
progress gradually over years
pressure in the pulmonary veins show a transient
rise during exercise
ECG-may demonstrate LVH
x-ray-left ventricular/atrial enlargement in
Mitral Regurgitation
Intermittent cases
typically present with acute episodes of
respiratory distress due to pulmonary edema
can be asymptomatic between attacks
Mitral Regurgitation
Many causes rheumatic disease
myxomatous degeneration (mitral valve
prolapse)
connective tissue disease (Marfan's
syndrome)
infective endocarditis
cardiac tumors (myxoma) - rare cause
Mitral Regurgitation
Nonrheumatic mitral regurgitation may
develop suddenly after MI,valve
perforation in infective endocarditis, or
ruptured chordae tendineae in MVP
Inferior MI due to right coronary occlusion
is the most common cause of ischemic
mitral valve incompetence
Mitral Regurgitation
Rheumatic heart disease is the most
common cause of chronic mitral
incompetence
Mitral Regurgitation
Appetite suppressant drugs (fenfluramine
and phentermine, or dexfenfluramine)
have been associated with cardiac valve
incompetence
Mitral Regurgitation
Murmur
Acute; harsh apical systolic murmur, begins
with S1, may end before S2
Heart Sounds
S1 and S2 are heard
Mitral Regurgitation Diagnostic Studies
Echocardiography
TEE
Nuclear Medicine/MRI
Cardiac Cath
MVP
Click-murmur syndrome
Etiology unknown - possibly congenital
Usually asymptomatic
May be associated with
nonspecific chest pain
dyspnea
fatigue
palpitations
MVP
Characteristic midsystolic click
may be multiple, often followed by late
systolic murmur
accentuated in standing position
Most commonly affects women
10% of cases - healthy young women
many thin
some with minor chest wall deformities
MVP
Usually no sequelae if only midsystolic
click present
significant mitral regurgitation may
develop in cases with late or pansystolic
murmur (due to rupture of chordae
tendineae)
MVP
Need for valve replacement
increases with age
men more than women require surgery
2% of patients over age 60 with significant
regurgitation require surgery
To reduce risk of endocarditis - antibiotic
prophylaxis prior to dental work or
surgery
MVP
Aggressive management necessary in
cases of symptomatic ventricular
tachycardia
Diagnosis primarily clinical - can be
confirmed by echocardiogram
MVP
With MVP there is an increased incidence
of sudden death
dysrhythmias
TIA for persons under age 45
MVP
In cases of MVP w/o mitral regurgitation
at rest, exercise provokes mitral
regurgitation in 32% of patients
this is a predictor for a high risk of morbid
events
Mitral regurgitation due to papillary
muscle dysfunction/MI
Mitral regurgitation may subside as left
ventricular dilatation diminishes or the
infarction heals
Transient (sometimes severe)
regurgitation may occur after an MI
In cases of persistent severe
regurgitation, poor prognosis with or w/o
surgery
Secondary Mitral Regurgitation
Papillary muscle dysfunction or dilation of
the mitral annulus in patients with dilated
cardiomyopathy of any origin
Valve replacement generally
contraindicated due to poor risk:benefit
ratio
However, valve replacement in cases
where the Left EF >30% have shown
good result in some studies
Aortic Stenosis
Aortic Stenosis
Blood flow into the aorta is obstructed,
producing progressive LVH and low
cardiac output
Most commonly, this is caused by
progressive valvular calcification
In younger patients with congenital bicuspid
valve
In the elderly with normal three-cusp valves
Aortic Stenosis
In the elderly the aortic valve becomes
increasingly sclerotic and eventually
stenotic
Degenerative valve disease is three -four
times more frequent in men than women
More common in smokers and
hypertensives
Aortic Stenosis
Congenital heart disease most common cause
Rheumatic heart disease second most common cause
degenerative heart disease (calcific aortic
stenosis)
3rd most common cause overall
Most common cause > age 70
Aortic Stenosis
Treatment
surgery is indicated in all symptomatic
patients
exceptions declining left ventricular function
very severe left ventricular hypertrophy
very high gradients
severely reduced valve areas
Aortic Stenosis
Anticoagulation with warfarin is required
for mechanical prostheses but not
essential with bioprosthesis
bioprosthetic valves undergo degenerative
changes and usually require replacement
with 7-10 years - newer ones may be
more resilient
Aortic Stenosis
Ross procedure
switching the patient’s pulmonary valve to
the aortic position, placing a bioprosthesis in
the pulmonary position
(bioprosthesis do not deteriorate as fast on
the right side of the heart)
This procedure has produced excellent
results without anticoagulation
Aortic Stenosis
Percutaneous balloon valvuloplasty
short term reduction in severity
restenosis recurs rapidly in most adults with
calcified valves
used on poor candidates for surgery or to
stabilize high risk patients prior to surgery
Aortic Stenosis
Classic triad of symptoms
dyspnea
chest pain
syncope
Aortic Stenosis
Dyspnea is usually the first symptom,
followed by paroxysmal nocturnal
dyspnea, syncope on exertion, angina,
and MI
Aortic Stenosis
Sudden death, usually from a
dysrhythmia, occurs in 25% of cases
x-ray- early on - normal, eventually LVH
and findings of CHF are evident if the
valve is not replaced
ECG-demonstrates criteria for LVH, left or
right bundle branch block is also present
in 10% of cases
Aortic Stenosis
Murmur harsh systolic ejection murmur
Heart sounds
paradoxic splitting of S2, S3, and S4 may be
present; pulse of small amplitude; pulse has a
slow rise and sustained peak
Aortic Regurgitation
(Chronic Regurgitation)
(Aortic Incompetence)
Aortic Regurgitation
20% of cases acute in nature
Infective endocarditis - accounts for
majority of cases
aortic dissection at the aortic root causes
the remainder of cases
Aortic Regurgitation
In acute cases, sudden increase in
backflow of blood into the ventricle raises
left ventricular end diastolic pressure,
which may cause acute heart failure
Rheumatic heart disease and congenital
disease cause the majority of chronic
cases
Aortic Regurgitation
In acute disease dyspnea most common presenting symptom
(50% of cases)
many cases have acute pulmonary edema
with pink frothy sputum
fever, chills - if endocarditis cause
Aortic Regurgitation
Dissection of the ascending aorta typically
produces a tearing chest pain - may
radiate between the shoulders
ECG changes w/aortic dissection ischemia or findings of acute inferior MI suggestive of right coronary artery
involvement
Aortic Regurgitation
Chest xray- in acute state demonstrates
acute pulmonary edema with less cardiac
enlargement than expected
Aortic Regurgitation
In chronic disease,
the ventricle progressively dilates to
accommodate the regurgitant blood volume
Marked peripheral vasodilation
Aortic Regurgitation
Chronic regurgitation
1/3 of patients have palpitations associated
with a large stroke volume and/or premature
ventricular contractions
Frequently, these sensations are noticed in
bed
Aortic Regurgitation
Chronic Regurgitation
wide pulse pressure with prominent
ventricular impulse
water hammer pulse may be noted
(peripheral pulse that has a quick rise in
upstroke followed by peripheral collapse)
Aortic Regurgitation
Murmur
high pitched blowing diastolic murmur
immediately after S2
Heart Sounds
S3 may be present; wide pulse pressure
Aortic Regurgitation
An association between the appetite suppressant drugs (fenfluramine and
phentermine or dexfenfluramine) has also
been found for aortic incompetence
Tricuspid Stenosis
Usually rheumatic in origin
should be suspected when right heart
failure appears in course of mitral valve
disease - marked by hepatomegaly,
ascites, and dependent edema
May also occur in carcinoid syndrome
Tricuspid Stenosis
Typical diastolic rumble along lower left
sternal border mimics mitral stenosis
in sinus rhythm, a presystolic liver
pulsation noted
Echocardiography & doppler
Cardiac Cath - diagnositic
Tricuspid Stenosis
Surgical options
valvotomy
prosthetic valve replacement
balloon valvuloplasty (experience limited)
may be initial procedure
Tricuspid Regurgitation
Right ventricle overload - result of left
ventricular failure of any cause
occurs in conjunction with right
ventricular and inferior MI
IV drug users - tricuspid valve
endocarditis and regurgitation common
Tricuspid Regurgitation
Other causes
carcinoid syndrome
lupus erythematosus
myxomatous degeneration of the valve
(associated with MVP)
Ebstein’s anomaly
Tricuspid Regurgitation
Signs/symptoms
identical to those of right ventricular failure
In presence mitral valve disease early onset right heart failure
harsh systolic murmur - lower left sternal border
- (separate from mitral murmur)
Tricuspid Regurgitation
Prominent regurgitant systolic v wave in
right atrium and jugular venous pulse
regurgitant wave, systolic murmur
increased with inspiration
Inspiratory S3 may be present
when secondary to mitral valve disease or
other left sided disease my regress when
underlying disease corrected
Tricuspid Regurgitation
Surgical repair
valve repair or valvuloplasty of tricuspid ring
preferred to valve replacement
Questions ??