Common Valve Pathologies Lecture Notes PDF
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Aston University
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Summary
These lecture notes provide an overview of common heart valve pathologies, including aortic and mitral valve stenosis and regurgitation. The document details the pathophysiology and auscultation characteristics of each condition.
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Auscultation of heart valves: ◦Aortic: right eternal border, 2nd intercostal space ◦Pulmonic: left eternal border, 2nd intercostal space ◦Tricuspid: lower left sternal border, 5th intercostal space ◦Mitral: apex, 5th intercostal space, mid-clavicular line Abnormal valve func...
Auscultation of heart valves: ◦Aortic: right eternal border, 2nd intercostal space ◦Pulmonic: left eternal border, 2nd intercostal space ◦Tricuspid: lower left sternal border, 5th intercostal space ◦Mitral: apex, 5th intercostal space, mid-clavicular line Abnormal valve function: ◦Stenosis - valve doesn’t open enough ◦Regurgitation - valve doesn’t close properly ◦Results in ‘murmurs’ ◦Most common causes: rheumatic fever, infective endocarditis, myocardial infarction (chordinae tendinae affected), congenital ◦Common valves affected: aortic and mitral Aortic valve stenosis: ◦Pathophysiology: ‣ Less blood can get through valve to outflow tract ‣ Increased LV pressure ‣ LV hypertrophy, and so left ventricular afterload increases ‣ Left sided heart failure -> syncope (fainting, since blood can no longer flow to the body), angina (chest pain due to heart, as cardiac output is low) ‣ Microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia (from shear stress, so RBCs are broken down) ◦Murmur: ‣ Ejection systolic murmur loudest over the aortic area (hence waves between S1 and S2) ‣ Narrow pulse pressure - crescendo decrescendo murmur Aortic valve regurgitation: ◦Pathophysiology: ‣ Blood leaks back to ventricles in diastole ‣ This increases stroke volume for subsequent cardiac cycles ‣ LV hypertrophy - as heart is working hard to pump blood around the body ◦Murmur: ‣ Early diastolic murmur loudest over aortic area ‣ Wide, bounding pulse (head bobbing, Quincke’s sign) ‣ Displaced apex beat Mitral valve stenosis: ◦Pathophysiology: ‣ Harder for blood flow from LA to LV ‣ Increased LA pressure -> pulmonary hypertension -> RV hypertrophy ‣ LA dilation -> atrial fibrillation -> thrombus formation ‣ LA dilation -> oesophagus compression -> dysphagia (difficuty swallowing) ◦Murmur: ‣ Mid-diastolic murmur heard at apex ‣ Irregularly irregular pulse (due to atrial fibrillation) Mitral valve regurgitation: ◦Pathophysiology: ‣ Backflow of blood from LV to LA ‣ Increase LV preload -> LV hypertrophy ◦Murmur: ‣ Pansystolic murmur heard at apex - hear the murmur throughout the systolic phase ‣ Displaced apex beat