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FoolproofWilliamsite

Uploaded by FoolproofWilliamsite

St Andrews

2023

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cardiac valve disease cardiology heart disease

Summary

This document provides learning objectives, definitions, and causes of cardiac valve stenosis and incompetence, as well as infective endocarditis, and their associated complications. It includes information on diagnosis, treatment and prevention.

Full Transcript

9/29/23 Valvular heart disease 2023 1 Learning objectives • Define the terms stenosis and incompetence • Describe the common causes of cardiac valve stenosis and incompetence • Define the term infective endocarditis • Name some risk factors for infective endocarditis • Describe the composition of...

9/29/23 Valvular heart disease 2023 1 Learning objectives • Define the terms stenosis and incompetence • Describe the common causes of cardiac valve stenosis and incompetence • Define the term infective endocarditis • Name some risk factors for infective endocarditis • Describe the composition of a vegetation • Name some probable causative organisms • Describe the local and systemic complications of infective endocarditis • Describe the principles of diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infective endocarditis 2 1 9/29/23 The problem • 10% of heart failure involves valve disease • Four valves – all can be affected • Primary and secondary problems 3 4 2 9/29/23 5 Definition of stenosis and incompetence • Stenosis Narrowing of the valve outlet caused by thickening of valve cusps, or increased rigidity or scarring. • Incompetence Or insufficiency or regurgitation (which is what happens) caused by incomplete seal when valves close, allowing blood to flow backwards remember vegetations 6 3 9/29/23 Valves and heart sounds • First: mitral and tricuspid - systole • Second: aorta and pulmonary – diastole Signs • Aortic stenosis • Aortic incompetence • Mitral stenosis • Mitral incompetence 7 Common causes of cardiac valve stenosis and incompetence • Congenital heart disease: bicuspid valve, atresia • Cardiomyopathy (hypertrophic, dilated) • Acquired – Rheumatic fever – Myocardial infarction – Age related – idiopathic aortic calcific stenosis – Endocarditis 8 4 9/29/23 Aortic stenosis General and systematic pathology / edited by James C.E. Underwood, Simon S. Cross. Edinburgh : Churchill Livingstone Risks Left ventricular hypertrophy Syncope Sudden cardiac death 9 10 5 9/29/23 dyspnoea 11 Post MI 12 6 9/29/23 13 Causes of mitral incompetence • Cusp damage – for example – Rheumatic heart disease – scarring, contraction – Floppy valve & Marfan syndrome - stretch – Infective endocarditis - perforation • Chordae – as above • Papillary muscle – eg post MI • Valve ring – as above, age 14 7 9/29/23 Mitral incompetence General and systematic pathology / edited by James C.E. Underwood, Simon S. Cross. Edinburgh : Churchill Livingstone, 2009. Most often post-rheumatic fever Risks Pulmonary hypertension Right ventricular hypertrophy 15 General and systematic pathology / edited by James C.E. Underwood, Simon S. Cross. Edinburgh : Churchill Livingstone 16 8 9/29/23 17 Define infective endocarditis • Infection of valve with formation of thrombotic vegetations • Virulence of organisms determines damage and severity of the clinical illness • Classified as acute and sub-acute • Bacteraemia is common 18 9 9/29/23 Risk factors for infective endocarditis • Valve damage – As before, especially after rheumatic fever • Bacteraemia – Dental – Catheterisation – 10% unknown – iv drug abuse • Immunosuppression General and systematic pathology / edited by James C.E. Underwood, Simon S. Cross. Edinburgh : Churchill Livingstone 19 Rheumatic fever • Acute multisystem disease – heart (myocarditis, valvulitis, pericarditis), joints, connective tissue • 3 weeks post Streptococcal infection (usually pharyngitis) • Immune mediated rather than direct infection • Occurs in children: 4-16 years • May occur in recurrent episodes • Chronic valve disease decades later 20 10 9/29/23 Composition of a vegetation Group D Streptococcus, gut commensals, skin Strep (Coxiella, fungi, Candida) General and systematic pathology / edited by James C.E. Underwood, Simon S. Cross. Edinburgh : Churchill Livingstone. 21 Local and systemic complications of infective endocarditis Immune Infective Thrombotic General and systematic pathology / edited by James C.E. Underwood, Simon S. Cross. Edinburgh : Churchill Livingstone. 22 11 9/29/23 • Acute Native Valve Endocarditis – valves may be normal – aggressive disease – virulent organisms, such as Staph. aureus and group B streptococci • Subacute Native Valve Endocarditis – abnormal valves – indolent but may deteriorate – alpha-haemolytic streptococci, enterococci 23 • Prosthetic valve endocarditis – 10-20% of cases – 5% of mechanical and bio-prosthetic valves become infected – mitral are more susceptible than aortic – early onset: Staph. aureus, gram-negative bacilli, Candida species – late onset: staphylococci, alpha-haemolytic streptococci, enterococci 24 12 9/29/23 • IV Drug abuse – 75% have no underlying valvular abnormalities – 50% involve the tricuspid valve – Staph. aureus most common For more reading see http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/216650-overview#a2 25 Principles of diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infective endocarditis • Treat Strep. infection with antibiotics • Prophylactic cover for invasive procedures eg dental work • Replace damaged valves • • • • Clinical suspicion & signs Imaging – especially echocardiography Blood culture Intravenous antibiotics 26 13 9/29/23 Learning objectives • Define the terms stenosis and incompetence • Describe the common causes of cardiac valve stenosis and incompetence • Define the term infective endocarditis • Name some risk factors for infective endocarditis • Describe the composition of a vegetation • Name some probable causative organisms • Describe the local and systemic complications of infective endocarditis • Describe the principles of diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infective endocarditis 27 14

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