Term
How long are the first and second heart sounds? Which has a higher frequency? |
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Definition
About 0.14s and 0.11s, the second sound (semilunar valves are more taut and vibrate for a shorter time, also arterial walls have higher elastic coefficient compared to ventricular chambers) |
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Term
What is the audible range of heart sound frequency? |
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Definition
Roughly 40 - 500 cycles/sec |
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Term
During which phase is the third heart sound occasionally heard? |
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Definition
The middle third of diastole (probably from oscillation of blood in ventricles after inrushing from the atria) |
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Term
Describe the fourth heart sound (atrial heart sound) |
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Definition
Sometimes recorded on a phonogram, weak and low frequency, occurs during atrial contraction from blood rushing into ventricles |
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Term
What condition causes the greatest number of valvular lesions? What causes the condition? |
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Definition
Antibodies formed in response to infection with group A hemolytic streptococci (Rheumatic fever). |
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Term
What are the valves most affected by rheumatic heart? |
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Definition
Mitral and aortic (due to higher pressure/trauma vs. the right side of the heart) |
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Term
What is it called when valve leaflets adhere to one another so extensively that blood cannot flow through normally? |
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Definition
Stenosis (stenosed valves) |
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Term
What occurs when valve edges are so destroyed by scar tissue they cannot close as ventricles contract? |
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Definition
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Term
Describe what happens in aortic stenosis, and describe its murmur |
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Definition
Blood ejected through small fibrous opening, left ventricular pressure can get very high, creates nozzle effect during systole, severe turbulence of blood in root of aorta, causes harsh loud systolic murmur, can sometimes be palpated as a thrill |
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Term
What happens during aortic regurgitation? Describe its murmur. |
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Definition
During diastole, blood flows back from aorta into left ventricle, causing a "blowing," "squishing" diastolic murmur of relatively high pitch |
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Term
What happens during mitral regurgitation? Describe its murmur. |
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Definition
Blood flows backward through mitral valve into the left atrium during systole, causes high-frequency blowing/squishing sound. Left atrium is deep, so it transmits to the chest wall mainly through the apex. |
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Term
Describe what happens during mitral stenosis and what sort of murmur it creates. |
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Definition
Blood passes with difficulty through the stenosed mitral valve from left atrium into left ventricle. Large pressure differential does not develop (so murmur may be too weak and low pitched to hear at all). Murmur is not heard until middle third of diastole, when ventricle is partially filled, and a low rumbling murmur can sometimes be heard then. |
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Term
In which phase does aortic stenosis murmur occur? |
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Definition
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Term
In which phase does the murmur of mitral regurgitation occur? |
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Definition
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Term
In which phase does the murmur of aortic regurgitation occur? |
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Definition
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Term
In which phase does the murmur of mitral stenosis occur? |
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Definition
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Term
Which valvular lesion causes the loudest murmurs? Weakest? |
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Definition
Aortic stenosis, mitral stenosis |
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Term
What happens to the net stroke volume output of the heart during both aortic stenosis and aortic regurgitation? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens to the left ventricle to adapt to a seriously stenosed aortic valve? |
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Definition
It hypertrophies, develops as much as 400 mm Hg intraventricular pressure at systolic peak. |
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Term
What happens to the left ventricle to adapt to a severe aortic regurgitation? |
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Definition
It hypertrophies, can eventually pump a stroke volume output of up to 250 ml (although as much as 3/4 will regurg back into ventricle) |
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Term
What happens to the blood when valvular defects cause diminished output? |
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Definition
Blood volume increases due to drop in arterial pressure and induced peripheral circulatory reflexes. Renal output drops, blood vol. and art. pressure increase. RBC mass increases due to tissue hypoxia. Together, venous return to heart increases, heart has to pump harder. |
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Term
After a critical stage with aortic valve lesions, what happens? |
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Definition
Left ventricle begins to dilate, cardiac output falls, blood dams up left atrium and the lungs. At mean left atrial pressure above 25 - 40 mm Hg, serious pulmonary edema appears. |
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Term
Mitral stenosis and mitral regurgitation both accomplish the same thing: reducing the... |
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Definition
net movement of blood from left atrium into left ventricle. |
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Term
In mitral valvular disease, build-up of blood increases the pressure in which chamber? This leads to the development of... |
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Definition
Left atrium, serious pulmonary edema. |
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Term
Lethal pulmonary edema occurs at what left atrial pressure range? Why not sooner? |
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Definition
25-40 mm Hg, lung lymphatic vasculature enlarges and can carry fluid away rapidly |
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Term
How does increased left atrial pressure affect the electrical conduction system of the heart? What abnormal rhythm can develop? |
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Definition
It enlarges the chamber, increasing the distance of the electrical impulse, develops signal circus movements, atrial fibrillation usually occurs. |
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Term
How does the body compensate for the effects of early mitral valve disease? |
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Definition
Increase in blood volume, mainly through decreased renal output |
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Term
What is the mechanism by which mitral valve disease causes change in the right side of the heart? |
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Definition
Left atrial pressure rises, blood dams up in lungs, pulmonary edema causes pulmonary arteriolar constriction, systolic pulmonary arterial pressure increases, right ventricular pressure increases, right side of the heart hypertrophies to compensate for increased workload |
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Term
Why are dynamic abnormalities of valvular lesions exacerbated by exercise? |
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Definition
Large quantities of blood are returned to the heart from the peripheral circulation |
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Term
For pts with aortic valvular lesions, exercise can cause... |
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Definition
acute left ventricular failure followed by acute pulmonary edema |
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Term
in pts with mitral valvular disease, exercise can cause so much damming of blood in the lungs that... |
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Definition
serious or lethal pulmonary edema can ensue in as little as 10 minutes |
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Term
Even in mild to moderate valvular disease, cardiac reserve diminishes. What does this mean (with regard to exercise)? |
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Definition
The cardiac output does not increase as much as it should. |
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Term
At what level does coarctation of the aorta often occur? What does this cause? |
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Definition
At the level of the diaphragm, arterial pressure in the upper body >> lower part of body |
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Term
In the FETUS, pulmonary arterial pressure is ______ , aortic pressure is ______, causing blood to flow through the _____________ and bypass the ______. |
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Definition
HIGH, LOW, ductus arteriosus, lungs. |
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Term
What changes occur in the lungs and vasculature when a baby is born and begins to breathe? |
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Definition
Lungs inflate, pulmonary vasculature resistance decreases, aortic pressure rises, blood begins to flow backward through ductus from aorta into pulmonary artery |
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Term
Why does the ductus arteriosus close? |
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Definition
Oxygen concentration of blood flowing through it is much higher than before, this constricts the muscle in the arterial wall |
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Term
Patent ductus arteriosus occurs in 1/______ babies. |
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Definition
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Term
What happens to the relative pressures in the pulmonary artery and the aorta as a baby grows older? What structural change does this cause in a patent ductus arteriosus? |
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Definition
The pressure differential between the aorta (high) and pulmonary artery (low) increases, this increases the diameter of the ductus |
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Term
What are the major clinical effects of patent ductus? What structural change occurs in the heart? |
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Definition
Decreased cardiac and respiratory reserve, causes weakness and fainting during exercise, hypertrophy of the heart |
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Term
In a patent ductus, high pressures in the pulmonary vessels caused by excess flow through the lungs leads to... |
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Definition
pulmonary congestion and edema, progressively more severe with age |
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Term
Most patients with uncorrected patent ductus arteriosus die from heart disease within the ages of ___ to ___. |
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Definition
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Term
At an age of 1 - 3 years, what sort of abnormal heart sound occurs in pts with a patent ductus arteriosus? |
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Definition
Harsh, blowing murmur that is more intense during systole, called a machinery murmur |
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Term
Patent ductus arteriosus is a ____ -to- _____ shunt. |
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Definition
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Term
Tetralogy of Fallot is a ____ -to- _____ shunt. |
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Definition
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Term
Tetralogy of Fallot is the most common cause of _________ because most of the blood bypasses the _______. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 4 abnormalities of the TofF? |
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Definition
1- aorta comes from right ventricle or overrides a hole in the ventricular septum, 2- pulmonary artery is stenosed, 3 - blood from left ventricle flows through hole to right ventricle or into aorta overriding the hole, 4 - enlarged right ventricle |
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Term
What is the major problematic effect of the TofF? |
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Definition
Shunting of blood past the lungs without becoming oxygenated (as much as 75%) |
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Term
Diagnosis of TofF is based on what 4 factors? |
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Definition
1 - cyanosis, 2 - high systolic pressure measured in right ventricle, 3 - x-ray changes showing enlarged right ventricle, 4 - angiograms showing abnormal blood flow |
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Term
What is the treatment for TofF? How does it change life span? |
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Definition
Surgical correction, from 3-4 to 50 or more years |
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Term
What are the primary causes of congenital heart abnormalities? |
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Definition
Viral infection of mom during first trimester, hereditary |
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Term
What special machines are needed during repair of intracardiac defects? What do they accomplish? |
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Definition
artificial heart-lung machines, extracorporeal circulation |
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Term
What are the 4 methods for oxygenating blood extracorporeally? |
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Definition
1 - bubbling O2 through blood and removing bubbles, 2 - dripping blood over plastic sheets in presence of O2, 3 - passing blood over rotating discs, 4 - passing blood thru thin membranes or tubes permeable to O2 and CO2 |
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Term
What problems occur with the machinery needed during open heart surgeries? |
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Definition
hemolysis, clots, bubbles, emboli of antifoam agent, needing large quantities of blood to prime the machine, needing to use heparin which interferes with hemostasis during surgery |
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Term
What are the two theories behind the mechanism of heart hypertrophy? |
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Definition
Increased strength of contraction causes hypertrophy, or increased metabolic rate of muscle causes it |
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