Valvular Emergencies
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Transcript Valvular Emergencies
Valvular Emergencies
October 11, 2005
Dr. Kanagala
Introduction
There may be abnormalities of cusps,
chordae, or papillary muscles causing
valvular dysfunction.
Significant valvular abnormality increases
stroke rate 3.2 times and death rate 2.5
times
Chronic Valve Disease
There may be decades between onset of
dysfunction and symptoms
Dilation or hypertrophy may preserve
cardiac function
Account for around ninety percent of
valvular disease
Acute Valve Disease
Acute valve disease can result in dramatic
symptoms.
Diagnosing a New Murmur
Consider murmur in context of patient’s
medical condition
Patient may have normal cardiac anatomy,
but murmurs can be associated with other
disease states.
Examples include anemia, thyrotoxicosis,
sepsis, fever, renal failure, and pregnancy
Diagnosing a New Murmur
A diastolic murmur or new murmur warrants
cardiology referral for evaluation/echo.
Urgency for accurate diagnosis and referral or
admission depends on severity of symptoms not
presence of murmur unless aortic stenosis and
syncope is suspected. Patient may be at risk for
recurrent cardiovascular event.
Innocent or Physiologic
Murmur
No abnormal symptoms or signs
Soft, systolic ejection murmur begins after
S1 and ends before S2, and heart sounds are
normal
Review of symptoms reveals no symptoms
compatible with cardiovascular disease, and
complete physical exam is normal.
Mitral Stenosis
Most common cause is rheumatic heart
disease
Progressive stenosis may lead to pulmonary
hypertension causing pulmonary and
tricuspid incompetence
Most patients develop atrial fibrillation
Clinical Features of Mitral
Stenosis
Symptoms include: tachycardia, anemia,
pregnancy, infection, emotional upset, Afib, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal
nocturnal dyspnea, acute pulmonary edema,
hemoptysis, orthopnea, PAC, systemic
emboli and infarction, right sided heart
failure
Clinical Features continued…
mid-diastolic rumbling murmur with
crescendo toward S2
With onset of Afib the presystolic
accentuation of the murmur disappears. S1
is loud and followed by a loud opening snap
(high pitched, heard at apex)
Clinical Features continued…
Apical impulse is small and tapping
Systolic blood pressure is normal or low
Signs of pulmonary hypertension include
thin body habitus, peripheral cyanosis, and
cool extremities
Diagnosis
ECG: notched or biphasic P waves and right
axis deviation
Chest X-ray: straightening of left heart
border, findings of pulmonary congestion
like kerley B lines and increase in vascular
markings
Confirmed with echocardiography (TEE)
Treatment
Diuretics for pulmonary congestion
Afib treatment
Anticoagulation if at risk for embolic events
With severe mitral stenosis patients should be
warned to avoid strenuous physical activity
If hemoptysis occurs due to mitral stenosis and
pulmonary hypertension, thoracic surgery may be
warranted
Mitral Incompetence
Causes include MI, MVP syndrome,
rheumatic heart disease, coronary artery
disease, collagen vascular disease
Inferior MI due to right coronary occlusion
is most common ischemic cause
Acute Mitral Incompetence
Causes
MI
Mitral valve prolapse syndrome
Rheumatic heart disease
Coronary artery disease
Collagen vascular disease
Inferior MI due to right coronary occlusion
is the most common cause of ischemic
mitral valve incompetence
Acute Mitral Incompetence
Presents with dyspnea, tachycardia, and
pulmonary edema
S3 and S4 is usually heard
Acutely, a harsh apical systolic murmur
starts with S1 and may end before S2
Patients may deteriorate quickly due to
cardiogenic shock or cardiac arrest
Acute Mitral Incompetence
Intermittent mitral incompetence usually
presents with acute episodes of respiratory
distress due to pulmonary edema and can be
asymptomatic in between attacks
Pronounced dyspnea may mask angina that
accompanies the ischemia
Chronic Mitral Incompetence
Late systolic left parasternal lift
High pitched holosystolic murmur starting
with S1 and may end before S2, heard best
in fifth intercostal space, mid-left thorax,
and radiates to the axilla
First heart sound is soft and often obscured
by the murmur
S3 heard and followed by a diastolic rumble
Diagnosis
ECG: acute inferior MI, left atrial
enlargement, LVH, new onset pulmonary
edema
CXR: minimally enlarged left atrium,
pulmonary edema, left ventricular
enlargement
Echocardiography is essential. TEE done
once patient is stable
Acute Mitral Incompetence
Treatment
Pulmonary edema: oxygen, diuretics,
nitrates, intubation
Nitroprusside: increases forward output by
increasing aortic flow and partially restoring
mitral valve competence as left ventricular
size diminishes
Dobutamine may be required for
hypotensive patients
Mitral Incompetence
Treatment
Aortic balloon counter pulsation
Surgery may be warranted if mitral valve
rupture
Evaluate for and treat endocarditis
Treat atrial fibrillation with heparin, control
ventricular rate with beta blockers and
calcium channel blockers
Keep INR 2-3
Mitral Valve Prolapse
Click murmur syndrome
May be congenital
Male, age above 45, and the presence of
regurgitation place patient at higher risk for
complications
Mitral Valve Prolapse Clinical
Features
Most are asymptomatic
Atypical chest pain
Palpitations
Fatigue
Dyspnea unrelated to exertion
Midsystolic click
Second heart sound may be diminshed by late
systolic murmur with crescendos into S2
Mitral Valve Prolapse
Diagnosis
ECG: usually normal
Chest X-ray: may be normal, or show
pectus excavatum, straight thoracic spine, or
scoliosis
Treatment of Mitral Valve
Prolapse
Usually not needed in ED
Beta blockers may be used for patients with
palpitations, chest pain, or anxiety
Suggest avoidence of alcohol, tobacco, and
caffeine to relieve symptoms
Patients with Afib/ risk for embolization: warfarin
with INR of 2-3
Patients with MVP and Afib without mitral
regurg., HTN, heart failure, and above 65 can be
managed with aspirin 160mg qd.
Aortic Stenosis
Most common cause: degenerative heart
disease/ calcific aortic stenosis
Most common cause in young adults:
congenital heart disease
Third most common cause in US, but most
common cause world wide: rheumatic heart
disease
Aortic Stenosis: Clinical
Features
Classic triad of dyspnea, chest pain, and syncope
Exercise may induce symptoms
Dyspnea is typically first symptom, followed by
PND, exertional syncope, and angina
Atrial Fibrillation is less common than in mitral
disease but 10% of patients have it at time of
surgery
Clinical Features Continued…
A small amplitude pulse
Slow rate of of increase of carotid pulse
LVH
Paradoxical splitting of S2
S3, S4 present
Classic harsh systolic ejection murmur heard best
at second intercostal space radiating to right
carotid artery
Sudden death
Clinical Features Continued…
Brachioradial delay
ECG: LVH, in 10% of patients
LBBB/RBBB
ChestX-ray: starts out normal, but
eventually LVH and CHF
Treatment of Aortic Stenosis
Pulmonary Edema: oxygen and diuretics
New onset Afib: heparin and cardioversion
Limit vigorous activity
Patients with symptoms secondary to aortic
stenosis such as syncope should be admitted
Aortic Incompetence
Majority of acute cases due to infective
endocarditis
Aortic dissection of the root is the second
most common cause
May be due to trauma
Causes:
Increased ventricular pressure: elevates
pressure in left ventricle, pulmonary
congestion results
Appetite suppressant drugs have been
linked to aortic incompetence
Causes:
Calcific degeneration, Ankylosing spondylitis
Congenital disease, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
Systemic hypertension, Reiters
Myxomatous proliferation
Rheumatic heart disease
Marfan syndrome
Syphils
Aortic incompetence Clinical
Features…
Dyspnea
Acute pulmonary edema with pink, frothy
sputum
Fever, chills: Endocarditis
Systemic emboli
Sinus tach
Dissection of ascending aorta
Clinical Features Continued…
Sudden death
Tachycardia, tachypnea and rales
High pitched blowing diastolic murmur
heard after S2
Some may have palpitations
May have stabbing chest pain, fatigue or
dyspnea
LV failure
Clinical Features Continued…
2/3 have no symptoms for up to 20 years despite a
significant lesion
Wide pulse pressure with prominent ventricular
impulse
Water hammer pulse
Accentuated precordial apical thrust
Pulsus biferens
Duroziez sign
Quincke pulse
Aortic Incompetence:
Diagnosis
Acute: The chest x-ray shows acute
pulmonary edema
Chronic: The ECG shows LVH and chest xray shows cardiomegally, aortic dilation,
and possibly CHF
ECHO is crucial
TEE if aortic dissection suspected
Acute Aortic Incompetence:
Treatment
Pulmonary Edema: oxygen, intubation
Diuretics and nitrites can be used, but may not be
effective
Nitroprusside plus ionotropic agents can be used
to augment forward flow and reduce LVEDP to
prepare for surgery
Caution when using beta blockers-risk of blocking
compensatory tachycardia
Emergency surgery
Chronic Aortic Incompetence
Treatment:
Vasodilators like Ace inhibitors or
Nifedipine
Right Sided Valvular Heart
Disease Causes
Endocarditis in drug users due to organisms such
as S.Aureus-isolated symptomatic tricuspid
pathology
COPD/pulmonary HTN
RV failure with dilation
Rheumatic heart disease
Blunt trauma
Congenital: tetrology of Fallot
Pulmonary valve incompetence
Clinical Features
Dyspnea, orthopnea: most common
JVD
Peripheral edema
Hepatomegaly
Splenomegaly
ascites
Clinical Features
Tricuspid Valve Incompetence: soft blowing
holosystolic murmur heard along left lower
sternal border
Tricuspid Valve Stenosis: rumbling
crescendo decrescendo diastolic murmur
that occurs just before S1. It is heard at
lower left sternal border
Diagnosis
Must obtain Echocardiogram
Treatment
Address the underlying problem
diuretics
Prosthetic Valve Disease
Two groups exist: mechanical non-tissue vs.
bioprostheses using porcine, bovine or human
valves
Survival is better with mechanical, and bleeding
more common in bioprosthetic valves
Valves may become stenotic and small amounts of
regurgitations common due to incomplete closure
Complications
Thrombi on valve
Degeneration of valve
Sutures around valve disrupted
Valve failure
Bleeding/embolism
Endocarditis/ ring abscess
May have increased susceptibility to
hemodynamic compromise from new onset A fib.
Complications
Lifelong anticoagulation is needed to
decrease risk of thromboembloism and
valve thrombosis
Clinical Features
Dyspnea
CHF
Minor/major embolic events
Neurologic symptoms: thromboemboli due
to valve thrombi or endocarditis
Bleeding due to anticoagulation
Clinical Features
Abnormal heart sounds
Mechanical model: systolic murmur
Aortic Bioprosthesis: short midsystolic
murmur
Mitral Bioprosthesis: loud diastolic murmur
Diagnosis
Chest x-ray: can help identify change in
position relative to previous films
CBC, RBC, PT/INR
If you suspect valve dysfunction-echo
May need cardiac cath
Treatment
May need cardiac surgery referral if there is
acute dysfunction
Treatment of prosthetic acute valvular
dysfuntion due to thrombotic obstruction is
thrombolytic therapy
Lesser degrees of mechanical valve
obstruction: anticoagulate to INR of 2-3.5
Treatment
Disposition can be difficult decision if
patient has worsening symptoms- consult
cardiology
Question 1:
Which of the following are clinical features
of Aortic Incompetence?
A) Water Hammer Pulse
B) Pulsus Biferens
C) Duroziez Sign
D) All of the Above
Question 2:
T/F The most common cause of Aortic
Stenosis in young adults is congenital heart
disease.
Question 3:
Causes of Acute Mitral Incompetence
include:
A) MI
B) Mitral Valve Prolapse
C) Rheumatic Heart Disease
D) All of the above
Answers
1)D
2)T
3)D