100% found this document useful (1 vote)
249 views

Amboss:Cardio

This document provides an overview of various cardiovascular conditions and treatments: 1) It discusses premature ventricular contractions, ventricular tachycardia, cardiac tamponade, streptococcus infections, acute rheumatic fever, myocarditis, mediastinitis, pericarditis, antibiotic prophylaxis, infective endocarditis, prosthetic valve infections, right-sided infective endocarditis, HACEK infective endocarditis, native valve infective endocarditis, infective endocarditis complications, and valve replacement criteria. 2) It also covers cardiac contusion, chronic venous disease, deep vein thrombosis, femoral artery pseudoaneurysms, pulmonary embolism, peripheral artery disease,
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (1 vote)
249 views

Amboss:Cardio

This document provides an overview of various cardiovascular conditions and treatments: 1) It discusses premature ventricular contractions, ventricular tachycardia, cardiac tamponade, streptococcus infections, acute rheumatic fever, myocarditis, mediastinitis, pericarditis, antibiotic prophylaxis, infective endocarditis, prosthetic valve infections, right-sided infective endocarditis, HACEK infective endocarditis, native valve infective endocarditis, infective endocarditis complications, and valve replacement criteria. 2) It also covers cardiac contusion, chronic venous disease, deep vein thrombosis, femoral artery pseudoaneurysms, pulmonary embolism, peripheral artery disease,
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18

AMBOSS SHIT

CARDIO
Block 1
 Premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) – asymptomatic skipped beats
o Palpitations, lightheadedness, dizziness, irregular heartbeat
o EKG – intermittent doublets of broad monomorphic QRS
o Triggered by lack of sleep & stress in young healthy pt.
o Tx. Observation and rest
o If frequent or long episodes of PVCs  echocardiography
 V tach – unstable  synchronized cardioversion
 Cardiac tamponade – patient unstable – FIRST pericardiocentesis to stabilize & then
treat underlying condition
 Strep. Gallolyticus (bovis) – colonoscopy
 Acute rheumatic fever – GAS infection – Tx. Penicillin V
o Prophylaxis with IM penicillin G benzathine every 4 weeks
 Alternative: oral penicillin V
 Penicillin allergy: sulfadiazine
 RF without carditis – 5 years or until 21 y/o
 RF with carditis – 10 years or until 21 y/o
 RF with carditis + permanent valvular heart defects – 10 years or until 40
y/o
 ARF – previously pharyngitis/tonsillitis without Abx. Tx. (GAS) + carditis + erythema
marginatum
o JONES – major / minor (high fever, elevated acute phase reactants, arthralgias)
 2 major or 1 major + 2 minor
o Carditis – dyspnea, JVD, b/l ankle edema, S3 gallop + enlarged cardiac silhouette
& prominent vascular markings
o Erythema marginatum – ring-shaped macules & patches
 Myocarditis – signs of CHF + recent URTI
o Viral infections (coxsackie B, parvovirus B19, HHV-6 infection)
o ECG & echocardiography – assess severity of cardiac dysfunction
 Myocarditis – presents with acute decompensated CHF complicated with dilated
cardiomyopathy
o Echocardiography – ventricular dilation & global ventricular hypokinesis
 Mediastinitis – due to perforation of mediastinal organs (ex. Esophagus) or by extension
of retropharyngeal infections
 Acute pericarditis – complications: cardiac tamponade or constrictive pericarditis
 Abx. Ppx. – prosthetic heart valves, hx. of IE, unrepaired cyanotic CHD
o Oral amoxicillin 1 hr. before procedure
 Infectious endocarditis – prosthetic heart valves
o S. epidermidis (early-onset IE)
o S. viridians (late-onset IE) > 1 year after valve replacement
 Also preexisting damaged native heart valves (ex. Bicuspid)
 Prosthetic valve IE due to MSS (methicillin-susceptible staph)
o Tx. Nafcillin + rifampin for 6 weeks + gentamicin for 2 weeks
 Prosthetic valve IE due to MRS (methicillin-resistant staph)
o Tx. Vancomycin + rifampin + gentamicin
 Right sided IE – TR – complication: septic pulmonary embolism
o IVDU & indwelling intravascular devices
 IE - HACEK – 3rd generation cephalosporins – gram (-) bacteria
o Haemophilus species
o Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans
o Cardiobacterium hominis
o Eikenella corrodens
o Kingella kingae
 IE with native heart valves – Tx. Empiric with IV vancomycin (includes MRSA)
o 3 blood cultures
 IE – neurologic complications due to septic emboli to brain
o Ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, cerebral microabscesses
o Tx. Empiric Abx. & noncontrast CT of brain
 IE – new conduction abnormality (ex. AV block) – perivalvular abscess – perivalvular
thickening with an echolucent cavity
 Biological valves (bovine & porcine) – preferred in patients > 65 yrs., patients with high-
risk bleeding & women with desire to have children
o If Hx. of intracranial hemorrhage, coagulopathy
o If severe thrombocytopenia (< 50,000)
o Short lifespan – sclerotic degeneration of valves
 IE surgical indications – mechanical valve replacement – < 65 y/o without CI for
anticoagulation
o Uncontrolled infection
o Systemic embolization
o Prosthetic valve endocarditis
o Fungal endocarditis
 Cardiac tamponade – pulsus paradoxus – SBP drop > 10mmHg during inspiration
 Thoracic aortic rupture – high velocity blunt chest wall trauma
o Widened mediastinum
o Esophageal deviation (deviation of NG tube)
o Depression of left main bronchus
o Hemothorax
 Can’t exercise – pharmacological stress test – adenosine, regadenoson, dobutamine or
dipyridamole
 Acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) – hemodynamically stable – Tx. Endovascular
revascularization
 MVP – high-frequency mid-to-late systolic murmur at apex + midsystolic click
 Cardiac myxomas – LA – position-dependent symptoms – early diastolic “plop” + mid-
diastolic rumbling murmur at apex  echocardiography  surgical resection
 Blunt force aortic injuries
o If stable – contrast-enhanced CT angiography
o If unstable – TEE
 MI  cardiogenic shock
o Tachycardia, hypotension, pulmonary edema, JVD, cold & clammy skin
 Aortic dissection – unstable & patients with renal insufficiency – TEE
 Mitral stenosis – opening snap + low-pitched diastolic murmur – if symptomatic –
Percutaneous mitral balloon commissurotomy
 Acute limb ischemia (due to Afib) – if threatened extremity – IV heparin + emergency
revascularization (within 6 hours) – balloon catheter embolectomy & catheter-directed
thrombolysis
 Surgical bypass – Tx. For chronic LE ischemia due to PAD
 Leriche syndrome – aortoiliac occlusive disease
o Buttock, hip, or thigh claudication
o Erectile dysfunction
o Absent or diminished femoral pulses

Block 2
 Cardiac contusion – after MVA – from asymptomatic arrhythmias to cardiac rupture
o Hypotension + tachycardia refractive to fluid resuscitation, including vasopressors
o Atrial fibrillation
o (-) FAST
o Cardiogenic shock (decreased CO)
 Chronic venous disease
o Pruritic dermatitis or a venous ulcer  advanced CVD  Tx. Endovenous thermal
ablation (if no CI like DVT or PAD)
o Varicose veins or edema only  mild CVD  Tx. Compression therapy
o Duplex US before any treatment
o Daily exercise & leg elevation
 DVT – CI of anticoagulation – recent surgery, intracranial hemorrhage, or active bleeding
– IVC filter – prevent pulmonary embolism
 Femoral artery catheterization – complication: femoral artery pseudoaneurysm – duplex
US (nonhomogeneous hypoechoic mass connected to a femoral vessel)
o AV fistula – limb edema, venous dilation of lower limb & symptoms of limb
ischemia, HOHF
o Tx. For symptomatic iatrogenic AV fistulas  US-guided compression
 Uncomplicated post-catheterization pseudoaneurysms /> 3cm  Tx. US-guided
thrombin injection (formation of fibrin clot – stops blood flow to the hematoma)
 DVT – Dx. Compression US
o D-dimer used to r/o DVT when pretest probability is low (Well’s criteria)
 DVT  pulmonary embolism  if stable start anticoagulation (LMWH)  CT pulmonary
angiography
o If unstable  echocardiography  RV dysfunction = PE
 PAD – Tx. Exercise – IF conservative fails then – cilostazol – if both fail to provide
symptomatic relief then – percutaneous transluminal angioplasty with stenting
 Acute limb ischemia – 6 Ps
o Pain, pallor, pulselessness, paralysis, paresthesia, poikilothermy
o Confirmatory test – Digital subtraction angiography
 Identifies arterial occlusions or dissections
 Differentiates between arterial thrombus or embolus
 AAA rupture – emergency surgery
o Alternative – endovascular aneurysm repair
 PVC (premature ventricular contraction) –
o Tall wide QRS
o By electrolyte imbalances, drugs, reduced ventilation
o Asymptomatic & treatment not needed
 MS  increased LAP  LA dilation  atrial fibrillation & increased pulmonary arterial
pressure (to overcome pressure in LA)  increased PVR  right ventricular hypertrophy
(right axis deviation) to compensate  RV failure  JVD & pitting edema
 Constrictive pericarditis – pericardial calcifications
o Fatigue, dyspnea, JVD, edema, kussmaul sing, pulsus paradoxus & pericardial
knock (high-pitched early diastolic)
o Tx. Pericardiectomy
 Aortic coarctation – delayed manifestation – rib notching (after 5 y/o) & left ventricular
hypertrophy
 Paradoxical emboli – through PFO or ASD (right to left shunt) – stroke + DVT
o Noncontrast CT
o Anticoagulant therapy once cerebral hemorrhage r/o
o PFO – confirmed with echocardiography
 VSD – progressive decrease in PVR first few weeks of life  decrease RV pressure 
increased left to right blood flow across VSD  increased overall volume of blood in
pulmonary circulation  increased lung perfusion (increased pulmonary vascular
markings)  increased pulmonary VR to LA  LV volume overload  LV hypertrophy
(left axis deviation)
 DiGeorge syndrome – chromosome 22
o Facial – micrognathia, cleft palate, broad nasal bridge, short philtrum, low-set
ears
o Cardiac defects (truncus arteriosus)
o Impaired development of parathyroid glands – hypocalcemia – tetany & seizures
o Absent thymic shadow
 Lithium pregnancy – Ebstein anomaly – holosystolic murmur at LSB & RA enlargement
with elongation of tricuspid valve leaflets & TR
 PFO – right to left interatrial shunt that opens during coughing (transiently increased
pressure in the pulmonary circulation  increased RA pressure)
o Asymptomatic – no intervention
 Venous hum – benign – continuous murmur at either side of the neck – louder during
diastole & MC on the right
o Murmur disappears o softer in supine position or flexion of the head
(compression of the internal jugular vein)
 Tetralogy of Fallot – RVOT determines severity of cyanosis
o RV hypertrophy  right axis deviation
o Overriding aorta, VSD & pulmonary stenosis
o Boot-shaped heart
 Tricuspid valve atresia – imperforated atrioventricular septum of the right side
o Venous blood from the RA via ASD to LA  mixes with oxygenated blood from
the lungs  pumped from LV into systemic circulation & pulmonary circulation
 cyanosis
o LV hypertrophy – left axis deviation
 VSD not fixed  Eisenmenger reaction (shunt reversal)  becomes cyanotic  chronic
hypoxemia  increased EPO  polycythemia
 Transposition of the great arteries – cyanotic heart condition
o Cyanosis shortly after birth that does not improve with O2
o CXR – egg-on-a-string (enlarged heart with narrowed mediastinum)
o Maternal diabetes
 Cyanotic congenital heart defects
o TOF – DiGeorge, Down, Mom drinking alcohol, PKU, diabetes
o Transposition of great vessels – mom with diabetes
o Tricuspid valve atresia – down syndrome
o Ebstein – lithium
o Total anomalous pulmonary venous return – heterotaxy syndromes
o Persistent truncus arteriosus – DiGeorge
o Hypoplastic left heart syndrome – trisomy 13, 18, turner & Jacobsen syndrome
 WPW – short PR & wide QRS with slurred upstroke (delta wave) – Tx. Procainamide

Block 3
 Fibromuscular dysplasia – young patient + HTN emergency + abdominal bruit at CTVA
o Confirming dx. CT angiography – stenoses of renal arteries
o Other imaging – duplex US & MRA
o Tx. Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty
 Venous hum – continuous murmur at right supraclavicular region – turbulent flow in the
internal jugular veins
 Cocaine-induced ACS – Tx. Aspirin, nitrates &/or CCB, benzodiazepines
o CI b-blockers (propranolol) – unopposed alpha-1 receptor activation
 Dilated cardiomyopathy – chronic alcohol use – ventricular dilation & reduced
contractility – abstinence from alcohol leads to reversal
 ESRD – peripheral edema, anemia, increased Cr & BUN, proteinuria & hyperkalemia
o Hypertensive nephrosclerosis – secondary to long-standing arterial HTN
 Sclerosis in capillary tufts & hyaline arteriolosclerosis on kidney biopsy –
caused by chronic damage from increased capillary hydrostatic pressure
in the glomeruli as well as ischemic damage from progressive narrowing
of renal arterioles
 Elevate BP & labs suggesting impaired renal function
 Arterial HTN – MCC of CHF
 TdP – polymorphic ventricular tachycardia – Tx. IV magnesium sulfate
 New-onset symptomatic Afib – measure serum TSH levels
 Acute limb ischemia – can be caused by thromboembolism due to Afib
o Prevented with warfarin (inhibition of the synthesis of vitamin k-dependent
factors)
 Symptomatic unstable bradycardia – Tx. Atropine
o If not improved – IV epinephrine or dopamine
 WPW – accessory atrioventricular pathway – bypasses the AV node
 Atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT) – a supraventricular tachycardia –
reentry circuit in AV node
o Alternative electrical conduction pathways (one fast & one slow) in the AV node
– underlying cause of AVNRT
o Triggered by stress, alcohol & caffeine
 Narrow QRS < 120 ms
 Wide QRS > 120 ms
 Atrial premature beats – asymptomatic – no treatment
o Avoid triggers – caffeine, alcohol, smoking & stress
o Echocardiography or cardiac monitoring (Holter monitor) considered
 Thromboangiitis obliterans – smoking most important risk factor
o Claudication pain, critical limb ischemia, very low ABI & hx. of migratory
superficial thrombophlebitis
o Smoking cessation – prevent gangrene & amputation
 Prinzmetal angina (vasospastic angina) – angina with reversible ST elevations &
negative troponin
o Tx. CCBs (diltiazem, verapamil) – acute attacks & prophylaxis
 Acute coronary syndrome – angina of new-onset, at rest & persistent, worsening or
changing in character
o Tx. Anticoagulant, antiplatelet, beta blocker, statin, ACEI & analgesic
o Cardiac catheterization
 Mobitz type 2 AV block – unstable bradyarrhythmia (constant PR with dropped beats)
o Immediate treatment (can progress to 3rd degree heart block & death)
o Unstable patients – cardiac pacing
o Tx. Atropine & beta-adrenergic agents (dobutamine, dopamine, epinephrine)
 Dyslipidemia – elevated LDL &/or triglycerides
o Caused by familial hypercholesterolemia or related comorbid conditions
o /< 75 y/o + concomitant clinical ASCVD + LDL /> 190 &/or estimated 10-year
ASCVD risk >/ 7.5%  STATIN
o 40 – 75 y/o + DM  STATIN
 Statins – HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor – most effective reducing LDL levels & improving
HDL & triglyceride levels
 LDL = cholesterol – HDL – (triglycerides/5)
 Vasospastic angina – associated to Raynaud phenomenon & migraine
 Pharmacological stress test (ex. Adenosine)
o Adenosine  coronary vasodilation  tissue ischemia distal to the stenosed
coronary artery  new ECG changes  diversion of blood flow from stenotic
coronary arteries  blood diverted to healthier vessels & collaterals  worsens
ischemia  coronary steal syndrome
 Niacin – upregulates prostaglandin synthesis – cutaneous flushing
o Tx. NSAIDS (aspirin, ibuprofen) – 30-60 min before niacin prevent flushing
 Symptomatic high-risk AV blocks – Mobitz 2 or 3rd degree  Tx. Transcutaneous pacing
 PAD – star management of ASCVD (increased risk of MI or stroke)
o Statin – control hyperlipidemia
o Antiplatelet – clopidogrel or aspirin – all symptomatic patients & considered in
asymptomatic patient with ABI < 0.9
 Recurrent malignant pericardial effusion (cardiac tamponade) – Tx. Pericardial window

Block 4
 OSA – Tx. CPAP
o Alternative – oral appliances (mandibular advancement device) and positional
therapy devices (in lateral)
 Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia with cyclic alteration of the QRS – TdP – prolonged
QT
o Acquired – amiodarone, methadone, ondansetron
o Electrolyte imbalances – hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia
 AAA
o Asymptomatic – abdominal US
o Symptomatic – CT angiography
o Elective endovascular aneurysm repair
 Asymptomatic >/ 5.5 cm
 Rapid expansion ( > 1cm per year)
 Symptomatic AAA of any size
 Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) – echo  systolic anterior motion of the anterior
mitral valve leaflet
o Asymmetric septal hypertrophy
o Increased LVOT pressure
 HCM – systolic ejection murmur that decreases with increased SVR (hand grip) – Tx. B-
blocker
 Thoracic aortic aneurysm (TAA) – CT angiography
 Nitrates – venous dilation  venous pooling  decreased preload  decreased end-
diastolic pressure  reduced myocardial wall tension  decreased myocardial oxygen
demand
 Tachycardia-induced dilated cardiomyopathy – resolves with treatment of arrhythmia
 Hx. of emigration – common rheumatic heart disease – AR
 Unprovoked DVT, DVT in unusual locations or recurrent DVT – limited cancer screening
– screening for colon, prostate, breast & cervical cancer
 Sick sinus syndrome (SSS) – sinus node dysfunction – MC by age-related degeneration &
fibrosis  abnormal automaticity &/or abnormal conduction
o Also exacerbated by beta blockers
o If ECG unrevealing  Holter monitor
o Bradycardia with sinus pause
o Tachycardia-bradycardia syndrome – palpitations, dyspnea, irregular tachycardia
o Tx. Pacemaker
 Chronic uncontrolled HTN – MCC of HFpEF – concentric hypertrophy – LV stiffness –
impaired myocardial relaxation – diastolic heart failure
 Chronic pulmonary HTN  leading to cor pulmonale - RVF
o COPD  hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction  pulmonary HTN  if left
untreated  chronically elevated RV AL  RVF
o Doppler echocardiography  estimate of PAP
o Right heart catheterization – to confirm dx.
 Cardiogenic shock – increased PCWP, CVP, SVR ; decreased CO, CI
 Acute radiation-induced pericarditis – adverse effect of radiation therapy of the chest
o High doses of radiation – cellular injury  inflammatory mediators & cytokines
 neutrophilic infiltration of the pericardium
o Constrictive pericarditis – complication of radiation therapy – years after + signs
of fluid overload
 Pulseless electrical activity (PEA) – chest compressions
 Diastolic or holosystolic murmur – considered abnormal so further evaluation
o Best initial test – TTE
 Anthracyclines (ex. Daunorubicin) – chemotherapeutic agents
o Dose-dependent cardiotoxicity – MC left ventricular dysfunction or a new-onset
HF due to dilated cardiomyopathy
o Dexrazoxane – prevent cardiotoxicity
o SE – myelosuppression & alopecia
 Cytarabine – SE: myelosuppression with megaloblastic anemia
 After major orthopedic surgery involving lower limb  increased in pTT is an indicator
of appropriate postoperative management
o Given heparin  heparin-induced thrombocytopenia – 5-14 days after initiation
– thrombotic events
 Atrial fibrillation  stasis of blood & thrombi on atrium  patients undergoing
cardioversion  can get dislodged & cause thromboembolism  anticoagulation with
DOAC (direct oral anticoagulation)  apixaban  prior to cardioversion & continue for
>/ 4 weeks after
 HOCM (hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy) – automated implantable
cardioverter defibrillator – to prevent SCD
 Sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia – Tx. Prompt pharmacologic
cardioversion with IV antiarrhythmics (procainamide, sotalol, or amiodarone)
 Malignancy-associated pulmonary embolism  increased PAP & RV AL  right heart
remodeling  RV dysfunction  systemic venous congestion & reduced right heart
output  RH failure  hepatic congestion &/or gastric congestion  decompensated
RH failure
o Tx. O2 therapy, fluid restriction, diuretic

Block 5
 Vascular ring – infants – compressive symptoms of the trachea
o SOB, wheezing, stridor due to tracheal compression; regurgitation of food
o CXR – tracheal bowing & narrowing
 Laryngomalacia – low-pitched inspiratory stridor that worsens in supine position &
during sleeping or feeding
 Afib – symptomatic (palpitations & tachycardia)  NBS is rate control
o Beta-blockers – CI in COPD/asthma
o Verapamil/diltiazem
 MVP – systolic murmur with clicking – myxomatous degeneration – Ehlers-Danlos or
Marfan
 Congenital bicuspid aortic valve – AR in young patients &/or AS
 AR – decrescendo early diastolic murmur
 Dihydropyridine CCBs (“dipine”) – peripheral edema
 Thoracic aortic aneurysm – cystic medial necrosis – back pain & chest pressure
o Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos, HTN, congenital bicuspid aortic valve & cardiovascular
syphilis
 DVT – majority in iliac vein & other proximal deep veins (femoral & popliteal veins)
o Pulmonary embolism – sinus tachycardia & signs of RV pressure overload such
as:
 RBBB
 T-wave inversion in precordial leads &/or inferior leads
 S1Q3T3 pattern (deep S wave in lead I, pathological Q & inverted T wave
in lead III
 Right axis deviation
 STEMI – PCI (percutaneous coronary intervention)
o Door-to-PCI time < 90 min but not exceed 120 minutes
o If PCI cannot be performed within < 120 min – thrombolytic therapy
 Inferior wall infarction (RV) – epigastric pain, bradycardia & hypotension – Tx. NS
 Atrial gallop (S4) – atrial contraction against stiff ventricle – in acute phase of an MI –
cause impaired relaxation of the ischemic LV
 S4 (atrial gallop) in older patients can be normal – ventricular compliance decreases
with age
o Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, AS, or HTN
 S3 (ventricular gallop) can be normal in young adults (< 40 y/o) or pregnant women
o Abnormal in older adults
o Dilated cardiomyopathy, CHF, or chronic mitral or aortic regurgitation
 Elevated JVP – from increased RA pressure – indicative of increased RV pressure
o Right HF, tension pneumothorax, pulmonary artery HTN & constrictive
pericarditis
 Elevated BNP (brain natriuretic peptide) & S3 gallop – indicate increased ventricular
filling pressure – CHF
o BNP released in response to stretching of ventricles
o Sensitive for CHF
o BNP > 400pg/mL in patients with symptoms of CHF  high PPV & have worse
prognosis
 Hepatojugular reflux – pressure to RUQ  jugular veins distended for 15s
o Help distinguish cardiac disease from hepatic disease in patient with b/l LE
edema & ascites
o (+) HJR – impaired relaxation of RV  inability to accommodate increased VR
o MCC are restrictive cardiomyopathy, constrictive pericarditis & RV HF
 Interventricular septum rupture – 3-5 days after MI
o Sudden hemodynamic instability (hypotension, tachycardia, tachypnea)
o Signs of RV failure (JVD, parasternal heave, pedal edema, clear lungs) due to left
to right shunt
o VSD – holosystolic murmur
 TIA + Afib – Tx. Warfarin or DOAC (direct oral anticoagulant) like rivaroxaban
 TIA only – Tx. Antiplatelet therapy (aspirin)
 Stable chest pain in women < 60 y/o or men < 40 y/o without additional risk factors or
concerning findings on initial ECG  low pretest probability of CAD
o No further testing at visit or
o Exercise ECG testing or
o Coronary calcium scoring
 Stable chest pain + intermediate to high PTP of CAD  coronary CT angiography or
cardiac stress testing
 Intermediate to high pretest probability of CAD:
o Advanced age
o Male
o Family hx. of premature cardiovascular disease
o Smoking hx.
o Diabetes
o HTN
o Obesity
o Dyslipidemia
 Stress testing using adenosine or dipyridamole – CI with reactive airway disease –
asthma – possible bronchospasm (use dobutamine)
 RAS – Dx. Abdominal duplex US
 Aortic coarctation – Dx. Doppler echo
 Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary HTN – can manifest with cor pulmonale
o Can result from single or recurrent episodes of pulmonary embolism & should be
suspected when pulmonary HTN is diagnosed
o Patients with risk factors for venous thromboembolism (malignancy, recent
surgery)
o Westmark sign (associated with pulmonary embolism; high specificity) –
decreased vascular markings on CXR
o Dx. Right heart catheterization + pulmonary angiography to confirm
o Tx. Life-long anticoagulation & pulmonary thromboendarterectomy
 Cause of pulmonary HTN:
o Idiopathy or hereditary
o Left-sided heart disease
o Chronic hypoxic lung disease
o Chronic thromboembolism
o Multifactorial (sarcoidosis, metabolic disease, chronic hemolytic anemia)
 Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction – cause of pulmonary HTN & cor pulmonale in
patient with OSA & COPD & ILD
 Central retinal vein occlusion – does NOT resolve spontaneously
o Massive retinal hemorrhages, dilated tortuous retinal veins, macular edema &
papilledema on fundoscopy
 Central retinal artery occlusion – stenosis of the carotid artery
o Fundoscopy – Hollenhorst plaques (bright yellow refractile bodies at the
bifurcations of the retinal arterioles) – cholesterol crystal embolization
o Carotid duplex US
o Carotid endarterectomy – symptomatic patients with stenosis >/70% or
asymptomatic >/80%
 Patients in shock with severe hemorrhage – initial bolus of IV saline followed by
transfusion of type O Rh (-) packed RBCs
 Acute aortic occlusion – life-threatening vascular event
o Lower limb & mesenteric ischemia symptoms
o Causes: atherothrombosis, occlusion of a stent or vascular graft, aortic dissection
& aortic embolism
 Left ventricular pseudoaneurysm (3-14 days after MI) – mural thromboembolism –
develop acute limb ischemia
o Dx. TTE
o Definitive dx. With angiography
 New-onset Afib – rhythm control with cardioversion or beta blocker (rate control)
 Prolonged episodes of Afib – increased risk of atrial thrombi & dislodgment with
cardioversion
o Afib >/ 48 hours or an unknown period of time – anticoagulation for 3 weeks
prior to cardioversion
o If cardioversion is desired earlier (pregnant or symptomatic) – time to
cardioversion can be shortened by doing TEE – to detect potential thrombi
 Moderate size PDAs – bounding pulses, widened pulse pressure & symptoms of HF
 Hand grip – increase AL – murmur louder
 S4 – decreased compliance of LV – LV hypertrophy – late diastolic contraction of atria
 Splitting S2 during inspiration – physiologic finding
 Superficial thrombophlebitis – NSAIDs, elevation of affected limb & compression
therapy
o Anticoagulation if large segment (>/5cm) or a thrombus near the deep venous
system &/or if risk factors for DVT present
o Duplex US – patients with risk factors for DVT:
 Pregnancy
 Chronic venous insufficiency
 obesity
 Digitalis toxicity – hyperkalemia, GI symptoms, palpitations, blurry vision
o Cardiac monitoring & ECG
o Blood samples – electrolyte abnormalities & serum digoxin concentration
o Tx. Digoxin-specific antibody fragments
 Stable angina – Tx. Beta 1 selective blocker (atenolol) – improve exercise tolerance &
reduce the frequency of anginal episodes – decreases HR & cardiac contractility 
reduces myocardial oxygen demand
o If CI of beta-blockers – CCBs, isosorbide mononitrate & ranolazine

Block 6
 Enterococci faecalis – infective endocarditis – nosocomial UTIs
o Tx. Ampicillin + gentamycin
 Cardiac catheterization (femoral access) + flank/back pain + suprainguinal fullness –
retroperitoneal bleeding
o Contrast-enhanced CT scan of abdomen & pelvis
o Rate but MCC of mortality after cardiac catheterization
 CHF – dyspnea on exertion + paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea + bibasilar rales from
pulmonary edema (left-sided HF) + pitting edema (right-sided HF)  reduced CO 
organ hypoperfusion  affects kidneys  reduced renal blood flow  compensatory
activation of RAAS  angiotensin 2  vasoconstriction of afferent & efferent arterioles
(more pronounced in efferent) + aldosterone effects  maintains CO
 CCBs – verapamil – PR prolongation & 1st degree AV block – if asymptomatic –
observation – follow-up ECG
 Afib – ablative procedures in patients who remain symptomatic despite medical therapy
– foci near the pulmonary vein
 Atypical chest pain – gastrointestinal discomfort in absence of retrosternal pain in older
patients with diabetes – cardiac stress test
 SA & AV node – supplied by the RCA – inferior wall infarction – can present atypically
with epigastric pain
o High-degree (3rd) AV block can occur because of SA & AV node supplied by RCA
o Right-sided leads (V4R, V5R, V6R) – obtained to evaluate for RV infarction
 Aortic coarctation – increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage if untreated – cause of
brachiocephalic HTN
o Intracranial aneurysm formation (due to HTN)
o Other complications: aortic arch aneurysm & dissection, CAD, ischemic stroke,
endocarditis, LV hypertrophy & HF
 PDA – blood flow from descending aorta to pulmonary artery (left to right shunt)
o In a large PDA – volume overload of the RV & the lung circuit  pulmonary HTN
 Eisenmenger reaction (shunt reversal)
o Palpable right parasternal heave & pronounced S2  right heart strain
o Differential cyanosis – deoxygenated blood reaches only the lower body with
preserved upper extremity oxygenation
 Brugada syndrome – repolarization abnormality – males of Asian descent
o Usually asymptomatic; can cause palpitations & dizziness
o Triggered by substance abuse or alcohol consumption
o ECG  persistent ST elevations on leads V1-V2 with intact P waves
 Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation – supraventricular tachyarrhythmia
o Usually asymptomatic; can cause palpitations & dizziness
o Acute alcohol consumption triggers it – holiday heart syndrome
o Subsides within 7 days without intervention
o Abstain from alcohol
 Constrictive pericarditis with TB – new-onset dyspnea + orthopnea + fatigue + night
sweats, fever, cough + immigration + CXR with pericardial thickening & calcifications
o Compliance of RV decreased & doesn’t expand during inspiration – JVD
(kussmaul sign)
o Tx. NSAIDs, colchicine, glucocorticoids, pericardiectomy & tx. of underlying
condition
 Tabes dorsalis – degeneration of dorsal columns
o Ataxia + lower extremity pain + impaired sensation in lower extremities & Argyll
Robertson pupil (pupils do not react to light)  3ry syphilis
o Risk of TAA (thoracic aortic aneurysm) from aortitis  aortic root dilation & AR
 Nitrates – vasodilation – migraine-like headaches; cutaneous flushing; hypotension
o Other SE: gastroesophageal reflux or reflex tachycardia (tx. beta blockers)
 Drug-induced lupus
o Hydralazine
o Methyldopa
o TNF-alpha inhibitors (infliximab or etanercept)
o Procainamide
o Penicillamine
o Isoniazid
o Minocycline
o Phenytoin
 Pericardial knock – high-pitched early diastolic sound
o In constrictive pericarditis – abrupt halting of diastolic ventricular relaxation &
filling by rigid pericardial sac
o Reduced ventricular filling  reduced CO  fluid overload  JVD, kussmaul
sign, hepatomegaly
o Etiologies of constrictive pericarditis: TB, prior cardiac surgery, radiation therapy
to chest, viral infection & connective tissue diseases
 Nitrate tolerance (isosorbide dinitrate) – long-term therapy  decreased effectiveness
o To prevent – intermittent therapy – nitrate-free intervals of at least 8 hours –
avoid taking at night
 First-dose hypotension – if two antihypertensives that work synergistically are given at
the same time
o Thiazide diuretics – inhibition of Na-Cl symporter in DCT  BP reduction – if you
add ACEI  hypotension
 Adenocarcinoma – tumor on descending colon with hepatic metastasis
 Carcinoid tumor – small intestine (terminal ileum) is the MC location
o Pellagra (niacin deficiency) – 3 Ds (dementia, diarrhea, dermatitis)
 African American with isolated HTN – Tx. thiazide diuretics (chlorthalidone)
o Also use dihydropyridine CCBs (dipine) – if concomitant metabolic syndrome
 Cardiogenic pulmonary edema – due to LV failure
o CXR – butterfly-shaped perihilar opacification, Kerley B lines
o Further increase in PCWP  alveolar edema (consolidation with an air
bronchogram) & pleural effusion (blunting of CVA)
 ARF – Sydenham chorea – milkmaid’s grip (alternating squeeze & release grip) – self-
limiting within weeks to months
 Afib can lead to atrial thrombus  emboli into arterial circulation – ischemic events
(splenic infarction)
 Fibromuscular dysplasia – most frequently affected arteries – internal carotid & renal
arteries
o Cerebrovascular FMD (headaches, pulsatile tinnitus, TIA)
o Renal FMD (renal HTN, abdominal bruit, renal atrophy)
o Tx. antihypertensives + antiplatelets + revascularization
 Stokes-Adams attacks – sudden loss of consciousness due to abnormal heart rhythm
(especially complete AV block (3rd degree)
 Statins
o Diabetic patient between 40-75 yrs.
o LDL >/ 190 & ASCVD (atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases)  CAD, PAD,
previous stroke, or TIA
 After MI – (several weeks to months)  ventricular aneurysms  systolic murmur, an S3
&/or S4 gallop & persistent ST elevations
o Can lead to CHF
o Myocardial wall rupture  cardiac tamponade
o Arrythmias
o Mural thrombus
 Critical limb ischemia – urgent revascularization
o >/ 2 weeks of pain at rest, nonhealing wounds &/or frank tissue loss in one or
both lower extremities
o MR angiography with occlusion needed for Dx.
o Via percutaneous transluminal angioplasty or bypass surgery
o Long-segment &/or multifocal stenoses or occlusions  femorotibial bypass
surgery preferred
 Atheroembolism (cholesterol crystals)  livedo reticularis, blue toe syndrome, GI
ischemia, pancreatitis, TIA, stroke, or AKI
 DVT prophylaxis – LMWH (enoxaparin) within 12 hours of surgery – patients with high
risk
o LMWH – lower incidence of DVT & lower mortality
o Therapy continued for at least 3 weeks after surgery
o LMWH – CI in patients with renal failure
 Venous air embolism
o Mill-wheel murmur – churning sound in precordial region – air in heart chambers
o Sudden hypotension, tachycardia, JVD, respiratory distress
o If mechanically ventilated  a sudden fall in end-tidal carbon dioxide
o Can be due to neurosurgical procedures, insertion/removal of central venous
catheters, penetrating lung injuries & barotrauma
o Management: compression of suspected entry site, correction of hypoxia &
hypotension & placing patient head-down position (Trendelenburg) or in left
lateral decubitus (Durant)  trap air emboli in RV apex

Block 7/8
 Congenital long QT syndrome (Romano-Ward syndrome) – family hx. of sudden death
+ syncope with exercise + prolonged QT > 440ms + no electrolyte abnormalities
o Tx. beta blockers (propranolol)
o If not responsive to beta blockers  left cardiac sympathetic denervation
(stellectomy)
o If recurrent syncope despite medical therapy or survival of cardiac arrest 
implantable cardioverter defibrillator
 Jervell & Lange-Nielsen syndrome (congenital long QT syndrome) – associated with
congenital deafness
 Chronic MR  chronic volume overload of LV  eccentric hypertrophy of LA & LV to
compensate & maintain CO  decompensation of chronic MR (due to progressive LV
dilation & myocardial dysfunction)  decreased SV  decreased CO  increased LV
end-diastolic pressure & increased pulmonary artery pressure
 HCM – associated with harsh crescendo-decrescendo systolic ejection murmur at LLSB;
accompanying murmur of MR (holosystolic at apex)  caused by systolic anterior
motion of the mitral valve leaflets into the LVOT
o Increases intensity with Valsalva & standing
o Decreases intensity with squatting or passive leg elevation
 AS – early stages asymptomatic but syncope with exertion – delayed peripheral pulses
o TTE – confirmatory test
 AR – early diastolic decrescendo murmur at LSB
o TTE – confirmatory test
 AV fistula – followed by intervention on the femoral artery  cardiac catheterization,
femoral ABG, surgery or trauma (gunshot wound) – edema & varicose veins in affected
limb
 Femoral artery aneurysm – continuous bruit
o Risk factors – age, HTN, hypercholesterolemia & chronic smoking
o Associated with other aneurysms (AAA)
 Carotid stenosis – Tx. statin, antiplatelet drugs & lifestyle modification
o Carotid endarterectomy
 Asymptomatic patient with stenosis >/ 80%
 If life expectancy is >/ 2 years
 MVP – myxomatous degeneration – MR – mid-systolic click
 MS – MC complication is Afib
o Rheumatic fever the MCC of MS
 Acute limb ischemia – commonly caused by thrombosis secondary to PAD
o However in absence of PAD – Afib can cause it  atrial thrombus embolizes 
arterial occlusion (MC location of arterial embolism is femoropopliteal artery)
 Confirm Afib with echo
 Cholesterol embolization syndrome – livedo reticularis & AKI
o Eosinophilia & eosinophiluria
o Kidney biopsy – spindle-shaped vacuoles (intravascular cholesterol deposits) –
confirm dx.
o Tx. revascularization – via angioplasty or endovascular grafting
 PAD – stenosis of the femoropopliteal artery – MC site
 Digoxin – increases vagus nerve activity – negative chronotropic effects – leads to PR
prolongation with possible AV block
o Hypokalemia increases risk of digoxin toxicity (ex. Loop diuretics & thiazide
diuretics)  avoided with digoxin
 CHF – hyponatremia – increased mortality
 MS – enlarged LA – compress esophagus – dysphagia megalatriensis
 AS – LV hypertrophy – increased LV oxygen demand – MI (angina) during exercise or
stress
o SAD – syncope, angina, dyspnea
 CCBs (dipine) – peripheral edema – Tx. ACEI & ARBs (vasodilation of postcapillary vessels
 reduction of transcapillary pressure)
 Beta-blocker intoxication – bradycardia + hypotension + wheezing + confusion +
hypoglycemia + prolonged PR
o IV glucagon – in symptomatic patients with no response to IV fluids & atropine
 RAS – reduced blood flow to kidney  unilateral kidney atrophy
o Treatment-resistant HTN; high renin & hypokalemia
 Isolated systolic HTN – decreased arterial elasticity & compliance – with aging
o Elevated SBP & normal DBP  wide pulse pressure
o > 60 y/o
o High risk of renal dysfunction & cardiovascular events
 Newly diagnosed HTN pt. – evaluate for end-organ damage & cardiovascular risk
o ECG
o CBC, fasting glucose
o Lipid profile
o TSH
o Electrolytes
o Renal function (creatinine with eGFR)
o Urinalysis
 Amiodarone – SE: chronic interstitial pneumonitis (inflammation with fibrosis of
interstitium of the lung) – 6 – 12 months after initiation
o Nonproductive cough, dyspnea, weight loss & fatigue
o Bilateral dry crackles during inspiration
o CXR: ground-glass opacifications
 TEE – detect aortic dissection in unstable patients
 TTE – detect pericardial effusion & cardiac tamponade
 Cardiac stress test – withheld medications before test
o Beta blockers
o CCBs (verapamil, diltiazem)
o Nitrates
o Methylxanthines (caffeine, theophylline)
 Aortic dissection
o Elevated BP, asymmetrical BP b/w limbs, diminished distal pulses, syncope,
sweating & confusion
o Extension of dissection into the aortic valve – AR at RSB – high-pitched blowing
diastolic murmur
o Complications of ascending aortic dissection – cardiac tamponade, MI & stroke
 Hereditary hemochromatosis (iron overload) – dilated cardiomyopathy + arthritis +
hepatomegaly + hyperpigmented skin + diabetes  Tx. regular phlebotomy
o Testicular atrophy
o Complications – dilated cardiomyopathy, restrictive cardiomyopathy & CHF
o Iron deposition in cardiac conduction system – lead to conduction abnormalities
 MC arrhythmia  paroxysmal atrial fibrillation
 Sinus node dysfunction
 Complete AV block
 Atrial & ventricular tachyarrhythmias
 Rarely SCD
 Pulmonary HTN - right-sided HF (peripheral edema + JVD + split S2) + pronounced
central pulmonary arteries
o Idiopathic; amphetamine & cocaine associated
o Confirmatory test – Right-heart catheterization
o Dx. made when mean pulmonary artery pressure >/ 20mmHg at rest & no
evidence of underlying pulmonary or left heart conditions
 Mitral murmurs – heard best during expiration & while patient lies on left side
 Pulseless electrical activity – nonshockable rhythm
o Chest compressions & IV epinephrine
 Reinfarction
o Serial measurement of troponin T levels (second measurement 3-6 hrs. later
showing 20% increase indicates reinfarction)
o Creatine kinase MB (CK-MB) – help in the evaluation
o Troponin T – 6 – 14 days to return to normal
o CK-MB – 2 – 3 days to return to normal (not commonly used)
 TRALI (transfusion-related acute lung injury) – within the first 6 hours - hypovolemia
o Dyspnea & diffuse bilateral opacities on CXR
o Hypotension & fever
 TACO (transfusion-associated circulatory overload) – within 12 hours - hypervolemia
o HTN & wide pulse pressure
o Evidence of volume overload (pulmonary edema, S3, JVD)
o Tx. supplemental O2 + diuresis
 Acute STEMI – emergency revascularization
o Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PCTA)
o Dual antiplatelet therapy (P2Y12 receptor inhibitor & aspirin) & anticoagulation
therapy (heparin or bivalirudin) also indicated
o Beta blocker initiated within the first 24 hours of admission
o High-intensity statin – regardless of cholesterol levels
 Ambulatory BP measurement – distinguish b/w HTN & white coat HTN

You might also like