Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Cardio Objectives
KYCOM Block 14
100
Medical
Graduate
03/01/2014

Additional Medical Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
defin coronary artery disease
Definition
narrowing of coronary arteries (vessels supplying heart)due to fatty streaks in coronary lumen in adolesence that progress to plaques
Term
non-modifable risk factors for coronary artery disease
Definition
family history: mom <65, dad <55
male gender
age
lipid/HTN/DM disorders
Term
modifiable risk factors for coronary artery disease
Definition
smoking (males x3, female x6)
LDL - primary target for prevention
HTN
obesity BMI >35
diet poor in fish, fiber, fruit
sedentary <20min/d
alcohol: >2/d in males 1/d in female
psychosocial: stress, anger, depression
DM/dyslipidemia/HTN
Term
symptoms of coronary artery disease
Definition
CP radiating to neck, jaw, left shoulder, abdomen
SOB, dyspnea, exercise intolerance
syncope, fatugue, diaphoresis
elevated BP, tachypenia, tachycardia
pale
new murmur (ruptured cordae tendenae)
may be asymptomatic
Term
symptoms of coronary artery disease in diabetic
Definition
may not be able to feel heart attack due to diabetic neuropathy
Term
symptoms of coronary artery disease in women
Definition
anxiety, nausea
Term
what are the 3 tx goals in reducing risk for CAD
Definition
LDL <70%
BP <120/80
HBA1C <&%
Term
meds that tx CAD
Definition
aspirin 81mg/d
copidogerl, BB, ACEI, Nitro
statins*in some
Term
when sould someone with CAD get a statin
Definition
LDL >190mg/dL
diabetic 40-74yo
Term
what therapies, not meds, can be done for CAD
Definition
oxygen: in acute event
invasive: angioplasty, PCI, stent
coronary bypass grafting: with left main disease or diffuse disease
Term
what is the difference between acute, subacute, and chronic pericarditis
Definition
acute <6wk: fibrous, sanginous or bloody effusion

subacute 6wk-6mo: constrictive, effusion

chronic >6mo: constrictive, effusions, adhesive (sticks to itself)
Term
3 drugs that can cause pericarditis
Definition
procanamide
hydralazine
Term
signs of acute pericarditis
Definition
mostly young adults
10-12d after URI
remits and relapses in 25%
precordial chest pain
pericardial friction rub
Term
what is precordial chest pain
Definition
back and left trap ridge severe retrosternal, left precordal
relieved by sitting and leaning forward
intensified by laying down
Term
pericardial friction rub: how is it best listened to, whn
Definition
pre-systole, systole, early-diastole
best in expiration
Term
lab changes in pericarditis
Definition
increased WBC, ESR, CPK, Ldh, AST, CRP
Term
EKG changes in acute pericarditis, why
Definition
widspread elevation of ST segment due to subepicardial inflammation
Term
EKG changes in late pericarditis, why
Definition
ST normal --> T inversion --> PR depressio (depressed PR reflects atria involvement)
Term
TX of pericarditis
Definition
antinflammatory (aspirin), if not responsive use NSAID or prednisone (RO TB)
cochicine may prevent reoccurrance
Term
what should never be given in pericarditis and why
Definition
anticoagulants: can turn serosangious effusion into bloody pericardial effusion
Term
define pericardial effusion, what are some causes
Definition
abnormal fluid between visceral and parietal pericardium

pericarditis, post MI, aortic dissection, CHF
malignancy, trauma, autoimmune, hypothyroidism (myexedema), TB, uremia
Term
what are the two types of pericardial effusion and their primary symptom
Definition
quick development: cardiac tamponade (200mL min)

chronic development: asymptomatic (2000ml max)
Term
explain what tamponade does to the heart and EKG in acute pericardial effusion, why
Definition
concaving of atria and ventricles so they cannot pump equalizing chamber pressures

causes electrical alterans: alternation of QRS amplitude or axis between beats, wandering baseline. due to heart swinging freely in pericardium
Term
signs of acute pericardial effusion
Definition
SOB
decreased exercise tolerance
CP
cough
orthopnea
fatigue
hypotension
muffled distant heart sounds
jV distention
paradoxical pulse
Term
what is beck's triad
Definition
hypotension, muffled distent heart sounds and JV distention in pericardial effusions
Term
explain what a paradoxical pulse is
Definition
>10mmHg rise in inspiratory systolice pressure deline
inspiratory enlargement of RV compresses LV
Term
acute pericardial effusion: CXR, ECHO, CT changes
Definition
CXR: water bottle heart
ECHO: pericardial fluid, RV small, late diastolic collapse (tamopnade)
Term
tx of acute pericardial effusion
Definition
hospitalize for large effusions
pericardiocentesis
Term
signs of chronic pericardial effusion
Definition
gradual dyspnea and fatigue
abdominal swelling, hepatomeagly, acetes, peripherial edema

pericardial knock (after S2 in diastole)

tachycardia

large heart silhouette

kussmaul's sign
Term
what is kussmaul's sign
Definition
JV distention increases on inspiration
Term
explain the pathology behind chronic pericardial effusion
Definition
healing followed by chronic effusions form granulation tissue that contracts into scar and calcification inhibits ventricle filling, decreases CO, and increases BP
Term
chronic pericardial effusion: CXR, ECHO, cath signs
Definition
EXR: calcifications on pericardial rim
ECHO: thick pericardium, halt in ventricle diastole filling
Cath: equilization of diastolic pressures in all chambers
Term
tx of chronic pericardial effusion
Definition
surfical stripping of pericardium: improvement over several months
Term
what is the most common primary pericardial tumor, signs, tx
Definition
mesothelioma
develops bloody effusion
surgical exploration needed to diagnose and tx
Term
what is the gold standard for cardiac diagnosis, what are the down sides
Definition
coronary angiography: invasive, high cost, unable to provide functional cardiac info
Term
indications for cardiac stress testing
Definition
chest pain: determine MI cause, atypical cardiac sound, angina suggestion, acute

follow up: recent MI, CAD event, high risk CAD, assess if meds working

diagnosis: arrhythmia, sedentary men >45 women >55 with demanding job, assess vascular disease, cardiomyopathy, before surgery and has risk factors
Term
what are the requirements of the paetient before a cardiac stress test
Definition
able to exercise
body habitus
recent EKG
clinical indication
prior history of revascularization
Term
what are the contraindications to stress testing
Definition
acute Mi <2d
unstable angina
uncontrolled arrhythmia or CHF
acute aortic stenosis or dissection
pulmonary or systemic embolism
myocarditis, pericarditis, endocarditis
HTN >200/110
Term
when should you stop a cardiac stress est
Definition
>10mmHg drop in systole (poor perfusion)
moderate - severe angina
ataxia, dizziness, syncope
desire to stop
sustained Vtach ST elevation
BP >150/115
Term
explain how a non-perfusion imaging stress test is done
Definition
bruce protocol: 2 min stages of increasing speed and incline, monitor BP HR EKG
Term
what is the best type of stress test in women, why
Definition
with perfusion imaging, they have more false positives due to brease attenuation
Term
how does someone "pass" their stress test
Definition
>85% max HR (220-age) without any ST changes, CP, arrhythmia

(some BP increase and unsloping ST depression are normal)
Term
indications and contraindications for adenosine stress test
Definition
unable to ambulate

AV block, sick sinus, bronchospasm, COPD, unstable CAD, caffiene, throphyline
Term
explain how a adenosine stress test is done
Definition
pt lays down
4-6min infusion of adenosine followed by nuclear scan
dilates arteries and parts with plaque will not dilate
pt should show increase in flow post test
Term
explain how a dobutamine stress test is done
Definition
pt lays down
influse and it elevated HR
take nuclear scan
ECHO: looks for wall motion
Term
SE and contraindications of dobutamine stress test
Definition
arrhythmia SE

aortic aneurysm, IHSS, arrhythmi hx, uncontrolled HTN
Term
explain how nuclear imaging of the heart is graded
Definition
1. normal: coronary and axial images fully perfused at rest and stress

2. fixed deficit: area of myocardium is not perfusing at stress and rest (scar or muscle damage)

3. reversible deficit: resting is normal but stressed shows decreased perfusion (blockage)
Term
what is a balanced ischemia
Definition
>70% lesion in 3 coronary arteries shows normal in testing (usually in diabetic)
Term
what are the indications for cardiac cath
Definition
assess coronary anatomy
confirm left valve dysfunction before surgery
unstable angina
non-ST elevation MI
primary intervention for STEMI
recurrent ischemia after MI
CHF
hemodynamic instability after MI
abnormal stress test
assessment of left valve dysfunction
Term
4 contraindications for cardiac cath
Definition
pregnancy
severe renal dysfunction
untreated bleeding disorder
allergy to iodine
Term
4 areas for cardiac cath insertion and their bad/good sides
Definition
femoral: most common, need 4-6h bed rest after

radial: arterial spasm, needs anticoagulation

brachial: most common site for acute thrombosis

axial: avoid median nerve injury, better for compression of artery against humerus
Term
explain the correlation of the degree of stint and risk of injury
Definition
50% could cause MI
it usually does not correlate with risk to patient
Term
when should you stint, what stint should you use, why
Definition
all angioplasty should be followed with stent if able
drug eliminating stents in short term show lower stensois rates that bare stents. they can cause late in-stent thrombosis years later but this is usually due to pt not taking their clopidogerel. so overall drug eluting > bare
Term
risk factors for in stint thrombosis
Definition
advanced age
acute coronary syndrome
diabetes
low EF
prior brachytherapy
renal failure
long stent
multiple lesions
overlaping stents
ostial or bifurcating lesions
small vessels
suboptimal stent results
Term
complications of catheterization
Definition
arrhythmia
perforate myocardium
death
MI
stroke
femoral nerve compression
blue toe syndrome
contrast induced nephropathy
distal emboli
retroperitoneal or femoral hematoma
AV fistula
dissection of vessel
pseudoaneurysm
acute thrombosis
Term
cause and signs of blue toe syndrome
Definition
days-weeks after cath atheroemboli go to...

kidney: eosinophilia in urine, causes failure in 7d

toes: livido reticularis lacy rash on LE

eye: halenhorse plaques

cause hypocomplementemia
Term
how is contrast induced nephropathy caused, how is it diagnosed
Definition
CHF, low volume, multiple myeloma, too much contrast, not hydrated causes renal failure due to effect of contrast

increase in 0.2 CR is norma, 1 increase diagnoses but will recover in 3-5d, 1.5 increase is at risk of failure
Term
3 complications probablly caused by arterial pucture closing device rather than manual compression
Definition
retroperitoneal or femoral hematoma (seen with in 12h)

pseudoaneurysm: pulsatile mass, systolic bruit (days-wks later)

acute thrombosis: loss of pulse distally, usually in brachial artery approach
Term
define ACS
Definition
acute coronary syndrome: unstable angina, non-ST elevation MI, acute MI
Term
define stable angina
Definition
reproducible CP on exertion relieved by 5-10min rest or nitro w/o change in frequency or intensity
Term
define unstable angina
Definition
CP at rest, severe or new onset, or crescendo
Term
causes of non-ST elevating MI
Definition
reduced O2 supply or increased demand...
plaque rupture - COMMON
dynamic obstruction: prinzmetal
progressive mechanical obstruction
unstable angina due to exercise, anemia, Afib, tachy, sepsis
Term
where is the culpret lesion most common from most to least in non-ST elevation MI
Definition
single vessel
two vessel
three vessel
no apparent (microcirculation)
left main stenosis
Term
signs of non-ST elevation MI
Definition
CP: substernal/epigastric, radiates to neck, left shoulder, arm
Term
what are angina equlivants
Definition
usually in women
dyspnea, diaphoretic, pale, cool, sinus tachycardia, S3, S4, rales, hypotension
Term
EKG changes in non-ST elevation MI
Definition
ST depression by 0.05mv
T waver incersion - less specific
Term
what are the CPK isoenzymes, when do they show up, peak, and go away
Definition
MM skeletal muscle
MB cardiac muscle
BB brain
rise 3-8h
peak 9-30h
normal 1-3d
Term
what is the most specific marker for MI damage, what does it tell us
Definition
troponin I
degree of elevation correlates with degree of damage
Term
what is the first cardiac enzyme to rise
Definition
myoglobin
Term
troponin I: appearance, peak, normal timeline, false positive conditions
Definition
rise 2-6h
peak 10-24h
normal 7-10d

renal dysfunction, CHF, myocarditis, PE, tachycardia, spesis, anemia
Term
what are the risk factors for non-ST elevation MI
Definition
>60yo
3+ risk factors for CAD
50% known stenosis
ST changes over 0.05mv
2+ episodes angina in 24h
aspirin with 7d
elevated cardiac enzymes
Term
what are the tx for non-ST elevation MI and when to use each
Definition
oxygen, blood work, bed rest 24h, EKG monitoring
nitrates: DOC unless slidenafil or hypotension
BB: except with CHF
CCB: if BB contraindicated
ACEI
statin: early administration
morphine: for comfort
anthrombotics
Term
what are the 4 anti thrombotics and when to use
Definition
aspirin non enteric: maintience
clopidogrel: aspirin intolerent
prasurgel: rapid onset, more bleeding
ticagrelor
Term
why would you do invasive PCI in non-ST elevation MI
Definition
recurrent symptoms despite tx
CHF with <40% EF
elevated troponin lots
new ST depression
abnormal stress test
history of CABG or high risk TIMI
vtach
hypotension
shock
PIC <6mo prior
Term
what is the early invasive PCI non-ST elevation MI strategy (pre and post care)
Definition
strat with antithrombotic: aspirin, clopidogrel loading dose, LMW or unfractioned heparin, factor X inhibitor, bivalirudin, GPIIb/IIIa inhibitor

do procedure

after: DC anticoagulation(continue for 48h if placed a stent), continue aspirin high dose for 3mo without stent or 6mo with stent then 81mg/d indefinetly

if choosing clopidogrel or parasurgel just use for 1y after DC anticoagulation stent or not
Term
exolain the conservitive invasive PCI strategy for non-ST elevation MI
Definition
pre treatment: start high dose aspirin, anticoag therapy, or heparin. consider GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor if worsens

if stable for 48h do low level stress test

if positive stress test, EF <40%, arrhythmia, recurrent symptoms do cath

if stress test negative: continue aspirin 81mg indefenetly or clopidogrel 1y
Term
who are the most common patients with non-ST elevation MI that are untreated 3
Definition
women
elderly
minorities
Term
explain the pathology of a STEMI
Definition
abrupt decrease in blood flow due to rupture of vulnerable plaque and resulting thrombus

coronary artery with lipid rich lesion in thin fibrous cap are prone to rupture and STEMI
Term
signs of STEMI
Definition
percipitated by exercise, stress, illness
pain: heavy, squeeze, crush
diaphoresis, SOB, radiation to neck, left shoulder, arm, nausea, vomiting, weakness, anxiety

often within a few hours of waking
Term
3 criteria of EKG for STEMI
Definition
new ST elevationin 2 contigous leads equal to or greater than 0.1mV (1mm)
new LBBB
true posterior wall MI
Term
basic management for STEM (before cath/thrombolytic)
Definition
cardiac monitor
oxygen
fluids
nitro
aspirin high dose
blood work
CXR
BB in first 24h
morphine
Term
when are BB contraindicated in STEMI, when should it be IV
Definition
CHF
bradycardia
hypotension
2 deg+ heart block

IV when hypertensive
Term
what should you never use in a STEMI
Definition
anti-inflammatory
Term
when should you cath in stemi?
Definition
>15min <24h symptoms
sign of shock or ChF
cath lab is available within 90 min of EMS arrival
Term
when should you not cath a stemi? Now what?
Definition
cath lab isnt open within 90 min of EMS arrival
administer thrombolytic within 30 min of EMS arrival
Term
absolute contraindications of thrombolytic
Definition
HX CNS bleed, vascular lesion, tumor, stroke within 3mo

aortic dissection
active bleeding
head trauma in last 3mo
Term
relative contraindications of thrombolytic
Definition
BP >180/110!!!!
CPR >10 min
surgery within 3wk
bleeding within 4wk
prgnancy
given thrombolytic within 5d
active peptic ulcer
on anticoagulants
Term
after giving thrombolytic what is the acceptable time frame for changes in pain and EKG
Definition
pain should resolve fast, ST elevations should decrease >50% within 90 min
Term
SE of thrombolytic
Definition
perusion arrhthythmia: PVC, non-sustained VTach
Term
when do you do a facilitated PCI
Definition
administer of thrombolytics with immediate transfer to cath
not able to get cath within 90 min
pregnant and has low bleeding risk
ONLY USE PARTIAL DOSE OF THROMBOLYTICS
Term
ok so they have a stemi and you decide to take them to cath. what is the prep steps
Definition
clopidogrel, parsugrel, or ticgrelor
IV heparin bolus then maintence
bivalirudin
GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor
Term
the stemi pt just left cath. what are their orders for their hospital stay and within the next 24h
Definition
hospital: statin, ACEI, stop IV heparin if uncomplicated, continue clopidogrel, continue aspirin

24h: continue clopidogrel/aspirin, ACEI
Term
now you just gave your pt a thrombolytic for a stemi. what are the orders for the hopsital stay and the next 24h
Definition
hospital: statin, ACEI, aspirin

24h: BB, ACEI if low EF or anterior wall Mi, aspirin
Term
you gave you pr a thrombolytic for a stemi. what are some indications you need to take them to the cath lab anyways
Definition
EF <40%
recurrent ischemia or persistent EKG findings suggesting MI
hemodynamically unstable
CHF
heart murmur which occurs in 24h or 3-5d later

low level stress test 5-7d from MI bad
chemical stress test 507d from MI bad
Term
what are somme complications of a STEMI
Definition
rupture of ventricle free wall
rupture of intraventricular septum
papillary muscle rupture
Term
who has a high incidence of rupture of ventricular wall with STEMI, when does it occur
Definition
no hx MI or angina
ST elevation on initial EKG
CPK0MB >150
anterior wall MI
>70yo
within 2wk
Term
signs of rupture of ventricle wall
Definition
acute right sided failure
shock
pulseless electrical activity
Term
signs of rupture of intraventricular septum
Definition
left and right sided heart failure
loud holosystolic murmur
hypotension
Term
who is is at risk for rupture of intraventricular septum, when
Definition
2-5d after MI
ST elevation was >72h
Term
sign of papillary muscle rupture after Mi
Definition
hypotension
pulmonary edema
widespread holosystolic murmur
Supporting users have an ad free experience!