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Diseases of the Heart Condition Congestive Heart Failure Left-sided Heart failure Pathology Impaired cardiac function that render the heart unable to maintain an sufficient cardiac output. Progressive deterioration of myocardial contractile function due to ischemic injury, pressure or volume overload or dilated cardiomyopathy. Failures can result from an inability of the heart chambers to relax sufficiently during diastole. Can occur with left ventricular hypertrophy, myocardial fibrosis, deposition of amyloid or constrictive pericarditis. Causes: Ischemic heart disease Hypertension Aortic & mitral valve disease Myocardial disease Clinical features Characterized by diminished cardiac output or damming back of blood in the venous system. Compensatory changes ultimately constitute further burdens on cardiac function. Morphology Compensatory changes: Hypertrophy makes myocytes vulnerable to injury. Ventricular dilation (FrankStarling law). Blood volume expansion by salt & water retention. Tachycardia. Manifested by pulmonary congestion & edema secondary to impairment of lung vascular outflow. Reduced cardiac output results in reduced renal perfusion. CNS perfusion is reduced, leading to hypoxic encephalopathy. 1 Diseases of the Heart Right-sided Heart failure Typically a consequence of left-sided failure. Caused by: Intrinsic disease of the lungs. Pulmonary vasculature causing functional right ventricular outflow obstruction. Tricuspid or pulmonary vulvar disease. Ischemic heart disease Results of reduced renal perfusion: Further salt & water retention. Ischemic acute tubular necrosis. Impairment of waste excretion, causing prerenal azotemia. Port, systemic & dependent peripheral congestion & edema & effusions. Congestive splenomegaly with sinusoidal dilation, focal hemorrhages, hemosiderin deposits & fibrosis. Renal congestion, hypoxic injury & acute tubular necrosis. Hepatomegaly: Centrilobular congestion. Atrophy of central hepatocytes, producing a nutmeg appearance. Severe hypoxia leads to centrilobular necrosis. High right-sided pressure: sinusoidal rupture causes central hemorrhagic necrosis. Subsequent central fibrosis creates cardiac sclerosis. Caused by: Angina pectoris: paroxysmal substernal or precordial pain or Reduced coronary blood flow; often a combination of discomfort. coronary atherosclerosis with Myocardial infarction is marked Myocardium has variable myocyte atrophy. Perinuclear deposition of lipofuscin, myocytolysis of 2 Diseases of the Heart vasospasm, thrombosis, or both. Increased myocardial demand exceeding vascular supply. Myocardial infarction Types of MI: Transmural infarct: infarction of full thickness of ventricular wall, caused by severe coronary atherosclerosis worsened by plaque disruption & superimposed occlusive thrombosis. Subendocardial infarct: by death of cardiac muscle. Chronic ischemic heart disease is seen typically in elderly patients; may result from postinfarction cardiac decompensation or slow ischemic myocyte degeneration. Sudden cardiac death: unexpected death within 1 hour of onset of symptoms. Causes of sudden cardiac death: Aortic valvular stenosis. Hereditary or acquired conduction system abnormalities. Electrolyte derangements. Mitral valve prolapse. Dilated or hypertropic cardiomyopathy. Ultimate mechanism of death is a fatal arrhythmia. Chest pain Nausea Diaphoresis Dyspnea ECG changes Serum elevation of myocardial enzymes, e.g. creatine kinaseMB isozyme. 25% of patients experience single cells or clusters. Diffuse perivascular & interstitial fibrosis. Patchy to confluent replacement fibrosis. Gross: 6-12 hours: lesions is usually inapparent. 18-24 hours: infarcted tissue is readily apparent – pale to cyanotic. First week: lesions becomes progressively more sharply defined, yellow, & softened. 3 Diseases of the Heart limited to inner one third to one half of ventricular wall. Typical sites of plaques: Proximal 2cm of the left anterior descending & left circumflex coronary arteries. Proximal & distal thirds of the right coronary artery. Pathogenesis: Nearly all transmural MIs affect left ventricle; 15% simultaneously involve right ventricle; isolated right ventricle infarction occurs in 1-3% of cases. Initial event in transmural MI: erosion, ulceration, fissuring, rupture or hemorrhagic expansion. Thrombosis follows acute plaque change. Time interval between onset of complete myocardial ischemia & initiation of irreversible injury: 20-40 minutes. Thrombi may lyse spontaneously, reestablishing sudden death after infarction, secondary to a fatal arrhythmia. 80-90% of survivors develop complications. Complications: Arrhythmias Congestive heart failure Cardiogenic shock Ventricular rupture within first 10 days – rupture of free wall causing pericardial hemorrhage & tamponade & rupture of septum producing a left-to-right shunt with right-sided heart volume overload. Papillary muscle infarction with or without rupture. Fibrinous-to-hemorrhagic pericarditis, common 2-3 days postinfarction. Mural thrombosis with risk of peripheral embolization. 7-10 days: a circumferential rim of hyperemic granulation tissue appears & progressively expands. 6 weeks: white fibrous scar is established. Histology: 1 hour: intercellular edema, & myocytes at edge of infarct become wavy & buckled. 12-72 hours: neutrophilic infiltration into necrotic tissue, with myocyte coagulative necrosis; dead myocytes become hypereosinophilic with loss of nuclei. 7-10 days: granulation tissue progressively replaces necrotic tissue, generating a dense fibrous scar. 4 Diseases of the Heart flow. Causes of Subendocardial infarcts: Diffuse coronary atherosclerosis. Global borderline perfusion made critical by increased demand, vasospasm, or hypotension. Disrupted plaque with overlying thrombus. Hypertensive Heart Disease Systemic (left Myocyte hypertrophic sided) hypertensive enlargement as a response to heart disease increased work. Thickened myocardium reduces left ventricle compliance, impairing diastolic filling while increasing oxygen demand. Individual myocyte hypertrophy increases distance for oxygen & nutrient diffusion from adjacent capillaries. Pulmonary (right Right ventricle hypertrophy is sided) heart disease secondary to pulmonary (Cor Pulmonale) hypertension caused by disorders affecting lung Increases risk of sudden cardiac death. Remainder die of renal disease, stroke, or unrelated causes. Thickened left ventricle wall with increased heart weight (>2cm wall thickness, heart weight > 500gm). Myocytes & nuclei are enlarged. Diffuse interstitial fibrosis & focal myocyte atrophy & degeneration may develop, with left ventricle chamber dilation & wall thinning. Right ventricle hypertrophy, to 1cm or more in thickness; dilation, or both. Right ventricle dilation may 5 Diseases of the Heart Valvular Heart Disease Degenerative calcific aortic valve stenosis Mitral Annular Calcification structure or function. Acute cor pulmonale: right ventricle dilation after massive pulmonary embolization. Chronic cor pulmonale: result of chronic right ventricle pressure overload. Vasoconstriction in pulmonary vasculature incident to hypoxemia & acidosis exacerbates pulmonary hypertension. Age-related lesions clinically important in patients in their 70s & 80s. Remainder are congenital bicuspid valves. Degenerataive, noninflammatory calcific deposits within mitral annulus, usually in the elderly. Regurgitation may occur owing to inadequate sytolic contraction of the mitral valve Angina Syncope Congestive heart failure lead to tricuspid regurgitation. Pulmonary arteriolar wall thickening. Left side of heart is normal. Heaped-up subendothelial rigid calcific masses within sinuses of Valsalva cause thickening & immobility of the valve cusps with narrowing of orifice. There is usually concentric left ventricle hypertrophy from chronic pressure overload. 6 Diseases of the Heart Mitral valve prolapse Rheumatic Fever & Rheumatic heart disease ring. Leaflets may be unable to open over bulky deposits, causing stenosis. Nodular calcific deposits may cause arrhythmias by impinging on the conduction pathways. One or both mitral valve leaflets are enlarged, myxomatours & floppy, & they balloon back into left atrium during systole, causing midsystolic click & mitral valve insufficiency. Common in Marfan syndrome. An acute, recurrent inflammatory disease that occurs 1-5 weeks after group A streptococcal infection. Occurs mainly in children Generally asymptomatic. Discovered only as a midsystolic click on auscultation. Atypical chest pain. Dyspnea Fatigue Psychiatric manifestations: depression, anxiety. Gross: Interchordal ballooning (>4cm) of mitral valve leaflets. Elongated, attenuated, or ruptured chordae tendineae. Fibrous thickening of valve leaflets. Thickened left ventricular endocardium. Atrial thrombosis Calcification of mitral annulus. Patients have increased risk of: Infective endocarditis Slow, progressive mitral valvular Histology: insufficiency that may produce Thinning & degeneration of congestive heart failure. fibrosa layer. Atrial & ventricular arrhythmias Myoxomatous thickening of Sudden death spongiosa. Changes secondary to tight mitral Histology: stenois: Aschoff bodies are foci of fibrinoid necrosis surrounded by Left atrial hypertrophy & enlargement, occasionally with lymphocytes, macrophages & mural thrombi. slowly replaced by fibrous scar. 7 Diseases of the Heart between 5-15 years of age. Secondary to host antistreptococcal antibodies that are cross reactive to cardiac antigens. Chronic rheumatic heart disease is more likely to occur: when first attack is in early childhood. when first bout of rheumatic fever is severe. with recurrent attacks. Vegetative Endocarditis Infective Colonization of heart valves Endocarditis with microbiologic organisms leads to formation of friable, infected vegetations & valve injury. Chronic congestive changes in the lungs. Right ventricle hypertrophy Congestive heart failure Complications: Increased risk of developing infective endocarditis. Atrial fibrillation secondary to atrial dilation. Diagnosis requires presence of 2 of 5 major Jones criteria: Erythema marginatum: macular skin lesions with erythematous rims & central clearing. Sydenham chorea: neurologic disorder with rapid, involuntary, purposeless movements. Carditis Subcutaneous nodules MIgratory large joint polyarthritis: 90% of adults, less common in children. Acute infective endocarditis: Rapidly developing fever with rigors, malaise, & weakness. Larger vegetations often cause embolic complications. Inflammatory valvulitis induces formation of beady fibrinous vegetations; aschoff bodies may be present in inflamed valves. Subendocardial collections of Aschoff nodules in left atrium usually induced thickenings called MacCallum plaques. Chronic valve shows: Fibrous thickening of leaflets. Bridging fibrosis across commissures. Thickened, fused, & shortened mitral valve chordae. Calcification deep in fibrous leaflets. Friable, 0.5-2.0cm, microbeladen vegetations are found on one or more valves. Acute infective endocarditis is associated with bulky 8 Diseases of the Heart Acute infective endocarditis: Caused by highly virulent organisms, e.g. S. aureus. Seeding a previously normal valve & producing a necrotizing, ulcerative, & invasive infection. Subacute infective endocarditis: Caused by an organism of moderate to low virulence, e.g. Streptococcus viridans. Seeding an abnormal or previously injured valve, causing less valvular destruction than acute infective endocarditis. Predisposing factors: Cardiac congenital abnormalities: tight shunts or stenoses with jet stream. Mitral valve prolapse Degenerative calcific stenosis BIcuspid aortic valve Prosthetic valves Indwelling catheters Neutropenia Immunosuppressed states Intravenous drug abuse Splenomegaly is frequent. Even with treatment, death occurs in days to weeks in 5060% of patients. Subacute infective endocarditis: Insidious onset with malaise, low-grade fever, weight loss & flulike syndrome. Embolic complications are less frequent due to smaller vegetations. Tends to have a protracted course & is less fatal than acute form. vegetations that cause erosions or perforations of leaflets, invading adjacent myocardium to produce abscesses. Subacute infective endocarditis has smaller vegetations that rarely erode or penetrate leaflets. Nonvalvular vegetations are found on downstream margin of a jet lesion. Ring abscess is present with prosthetic valves. With intravenous drug abuse, vegetations are often acute & or on right-sided valves. Clinical consequences: Direct injury to valves. Emboli to spleen, kidneys, heart & brain with infarction or metastatic infection. Renal injury: embolic infarction or glomerulonephritis. Diagnosis is confirmed by blood cultures. 9 Diseases of the Heart Nonbacterial Thrombotic Endocarditis Occurs in settings of disseminated intravascular coagulation or other hypercoagulable state: Cancer: visceral adenocarcinomas Renal failure Chronic sepsis Endocarditis Valvulitis may appear in associated with SLE systemic lupus erythematous & antiphospholipid syndrome. Mitral & tricuspid valves are most often affected with fibrinoid necrosis, mucoid degeneration & subsequent development of small, fibrinous, sterile vegetations on either side of valve leaflets. Carcinoid heart Elaboration of disease argentaffinomas of bioactive products – serotonin, kallikrein, histamine & prostaglandins. Predominantly right-sided heart lesions. Small (1-5mm), sterile, bland fibrin & platelet thrombi loosely adherent to valve leaflets. Plaquelike intimal thickenings of endocardium of tricuspid valve, right ventricular flow tract & pulmonic valve. Left side of heart is usually unaffected. Use of fenfluramine & phentermine, appetite suppressants used to treat obesity associated with similar left-sided valve lesions. 10 Diseases of the Heart Complications of artificial valves Cardiomyopathy Dilated cardiomyopathy Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Paravalvular leak: separation of sewing ring from valve annulus. Thrombosis, thromboembolism, or both. Infective endocarditis. Structural deterioration. Occlusion as a result of tissue overgrowth. Hemolysis from mechanical trauma to erythrocytes. Gradual four-chamber hypertrophy & dilation. May occur at any age as slow, progressive congestive heart failure. Causes: Genetic defect Alcohol toxicity Peripartum cardiomyopathy Postviral myocarditis Heavy, muscular, hypercontractile, poorly compliant heart with poor diastolic relaxation. Autosomal dominant inheritance: mutations of gene for myosin heavy chain & Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy: Heart failure & various rhythm disturbances. Ventricular tachycardia & sudden death. Death occurs secondary to progressive congestive heart failure, embolism of mural thrombi, or fatal arrhythmias. Clinical symptoms: Dyspnea Angina Near-syncope Congestive heart failure Cardiomegaly (up to 900gm) & flabby heart. Poor contractile function & stasis lead to mural thrombi. Milde to moderate focal endocardial thickening in ventricles. Right ventricular wall is severely thinned, with excessive fatty infiltration, loss of myocytes & interstitial fibrosis. Cardiomegaly, owing to hypertrophy, often with atrial dilation. Disproportionate thickening of the septum versus left ventricle free wall (asymmetrical septal hypertrophy) 11 Diseases of the Heart Restrictive cardiomyopathy other contractile proteins. Increased risk of sudden death. Restriction of ventricular filling & reduced cardiac output. Interstitial myocardial fibrosis is usually present. Endomyocardial fibrosis: found typically in young children & adults in Africa. Endocardial fibroelastosis: common in patients younger than 2 years old, one-third with congenital abnormalities. Complications: Atrial fibrillation with mural thrombus Embolization Infective endocarditis Congestive heart failure Sudden death Left ventricle cavity compressed into a banana-like configuration. Septum shows helter-skelter myocyte disarray, accompanied by myofilament disorganization within muscle cells. Patchy replacement fibrosis as a result of focal ischemic injury & abnormal thick-walled arteries of unknown origin. Endomyocardial fibrosis: Ventricular subendocardial fibrosis. Mural thrombus formation. Loeffler endocarditis: Endomyocardial fibrosis with large mural thrombi. Peripheral eosinophilia. Eosinophilic infiltration of multiple organs, including heart (rapid fatal course). Endocardial fibroelastosis: Focal-to-diffuse, cartilage-like fibroelastic thickening of endocardium. Affects left ventricle more. 12 Diseases of the Heart Myocarditis Infections: Viruses: coxsackievirus, ECHO, influenza, HIV, CMV. Chlamydia: C. psittaci Rickettsia Bacteria: Corynebacterium, meningococcus, Borrelia. Fungi: Candida Protozoa: Trypanosoma cruzi, toxoplasmosis Helminths: trichinosis Immune-mediated reactions: Postviral Poststreptococcal (rheumatic fever) Systemic lupus erythematous Drug hypersensitivity: methyldopa, sulfonamides Transplant rejection Unknown: Sarcoidosis Giant cell myocarditis Asymptomatic Abrupt onset of arrhythmia Congestive heart failure Sudden death Most patients recover quickly without sequelae. Gross: Flabby ventricular myocardium Four-chamber dilation Patchy, diffuse hemorrhagic mottling. Mural thrombi arise in dilated chambers. Histology: Myocardial inflammatory infiltrate with associated myocyte necrosis or degeneration. Lesions are typically focal. Myocarditis associated with viral infections: isolated myofiber necrosis with interstitial edema & mononuclear cell infiltrate. Chagas disease: trypanosomes parasitize myocytes & produce acute & chronic inflammation, including eosinophils. Idiopathic giant cell myocarditis: focal myocyte necrosis associated with granulomatous inflammation, including multinucleated giant cells. 13 Diseases of the Heart Other myocardium diseases Pericardial Disease Pericardial effusion Hemopericardium Doxorubicin & Daunorubicin induce a dose-dependent cardiotoxicity due to lipid peroxidation of myofiber membranes. Iron overload with hemosiderin deposits in myofibers occur in hereditary hemochromatosis & hemosiderosis from multiple blood transfusions. Amyloidosis: patchy & perivascular hyaline deposits. Catecholamines induce tachycardia & vasomotor constriction resulting in diffuse patchy ischemic necrosis. Serous form is most common. Fluid accumulates slowly till a large volume compromises diastolic filling. Most common causes are congestive heart failure & hypoproteinemia. Accumulation of pure, clotted blood in pericardium without an inflammatory component. 200-300ml may cause Myofiber swelling Fatty change Individual cell lysis Mitochondrial abnormalities Smooth endoplasmic reticulum swelling & fragmentation Myofibril lysis Delicate interstitial fibrosis & focal replacement scarring occur with time. 14 Diseases of the Heart tamponade. Acute Pericarditis Causes: Traumatic perforation. Myocardial rupture after a transmural MI. Rupture of intrapericardial aorta. Hemorrhage from an abscess or tumor metastasis. Serous: Consists of 50-200ml of slowly accumulating exudate. Produced by rheumatic fever, SLE, tumors, uremia & primary viral infection. Scant epicardial & pericardial acute & chronic inflammatory infiltrate. Fibrinous: Most common clinical form. Seen with MI Associated with a pericardial rub. Exudate may be completely resolved or organized leaving delicate, stringy adhesions. 15 Diseases of the Heart Purulent: Bacterial, fungal or parasitic infection which has reached pericardium by direct seeding, hematogenous or lymphatic spread. Common causes: grampositive staphylococci, streptococci & pneumococci. 400-500ml of thin-to-creamy pus with erythematous, granular serosal surfaces. Presents with fever, rigors & a friction rub. Hemorrhagic: Exduate of blood mixed with fibrinous-to-suppurative effusion. Follows cardiac surgery. Associated with tuberculosis or malignancy. Usually organizes without calcification. Chronic Pericarditis Caseous: due to tuberculosis or mycotic infection. Healing of acute lesions lead to: Resolution Pericardial fibrosis ranging 16 Diseases of the Heart from a thick, nonadherent epicardial plaque to thin, delicate adhesions. Adhesive mediastinopericarditis: Pericardial sac is obliterated. Parietal layer is tethered to mediastinal tissue. Heart contract against surrounding attached structures, with subsequent hypertrophy & dilation. Rheumatoid heart disease Constrictive pericarditis: Thick, dense fibrous obliteration. Calcification of pericardial sac. Limit diastolic expansion & restricting cardiac output. Common cause: tuberculosis. Rheumatoid arthritis in 2040% of severe chronic cases. Pericarditis, marked by a mixture of fibrin & necrotic debris derived from pericardial rheumatoid granulomas. Progress to form dense, fibrous, & restrictive 17 Diseases of the Heart adhesions. Tumors Myxomas Lipomas Papillary fibroelastomas Rhabdomyomas Most common primary cardiac tumors in adults. 90% arise in atria in region of fossa ovale. Cause symptoms by physical obstruction or trauma to atrioventricular valves. Probably hamartomas. Circumscribed but poorly encapsulated large polypoid accumulations of adipose tissue. Probably hamartomas. Commonly found on rightsided valves in children & left-sided valves in adults. Composed of 2-55mm hairlike projections. Probably derived from organized thrombi. Most common primary heart tumor in children. May cause valvular or outflow tract obstruction. Probably hamartomas. Composed of stellate or globular multipotential mesenchymal myxoma cells. Admixed with endothelia, smooth muscle & inflammatory cells. Filaments have a core of myxoid connective tissue with smooth muscle cells & fibroblasts, covered by endothelium. Composed of large, rounded or polygonal cells rich in glycogen & containing myofibrils. Cytoplasmic strands radiating from central nucleus to plasma membrane create spider cells. 18 Diseases of the Heart Congenital heart disease: Most critical juncture is embryologic cardiac development in gestational weeks 3 through 8. Complications: failure to thrive, retarded development, cyanosis, increased risk of chronic illness & of infective endocarditis. Shunts Secondary findings: Abnormal communication between heart chambers, Clubbing of fingers & toes vessels, or between chambers Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy & vessels. Polycythemia Left-to-Right Shunts: Late Cyanosis Atrial septal defect Abnormal opening in the Usually asymptomatic until atrial septum that allows free adulthood. communication of blood. Right-sided heart failure. Most common congenital Right-sided hypertrophy. cardiac anomaly in adults. Surgical correction early in life Primum type: 5%; common in prevents pulmonary vascular Down syndrome. changes & paradoxic embolism. Secundum type: 90%, occurs at foramen ovale. Sinus venosus type: 5%; occurs high in septum & near superior vena cava entrance. Ventricular septal Abnormal opening in Fulminant congestive heart defect ventricular septum that allows failure. free communication between Late cyanosis. left & right ventricles. Asymptomatic holosystolic Most common congenital murmurs. cardiac anomaly. Spontaneous closure. Associated with other Increased risk of infective structural anomalies such as endocarditis. tetralogy of Fallot; 30% are Surgical correction needed isolated. before right-sided heart overload 19 Diseases of the Heart Patent ductus arteriosus In fetus, ductus arteriosus permits blood flow between aorta & pulmonary artery. 85-90% isolated defects. Associated left ventricle hypertrophy & pulmonary artery dilation. Right-to-Left Shunts: Early Cyanosis Tetralogy of Fallot Due to embryologic anterosuperior displacement of infundibular septum. Four cardinal features: Ventricular septal defect Dextroposed aorta overriding the ventricular septal defect Pulmonary stenosis with right ventricle outflow obstruction Right ventricle hypertrophy Transposition of The aorta arises from right great arteries ventricle & pulmonary artery from the left. Common in children of diabetic mothers. Truncus arteriosus Associated with numerous cardiac defects. A developmental failure of the aorta & pulmonary artery to separate. & pulmonary vascular disease develop. Initially asymptomatic with prominent heart murmur. Pulmonary hypertension with right ventricle hyperthropy. Early closure with prostaglandin or surgery. Cyanosis is present from birth or soon after. Prognosis depends on severity of tissue hypoxia & ability of right ventricle to maintain aortic flow. Untreated, most children die within a few months. 20 Diseases of the Heart Results in an infundibular ventricular septal defect with a single vessel receiving blood from both right & left ventricles. Obstructive Congenital Anomalies Coarctation of aorta Constriction of aorta with cardiomegaly. Preductal coarctation: Manifests early in life & may be rapidly fatal. Lower body cyanosis Involves a 1-5cm segment of aortic root. Associated with fetal right ventricle hypertrophy & early right-sided heart failure. Untreated, mean life span is 40 years. Death secondary to: Congestive heart failure. Aortic dissection proximal to coarctation. Intracranial hemorrhage. Infective endocarditis at site of narrowing. Postductal coarctation: Generally asymptomatic unless severe. Leads to upper extremity hypertension. Low flow & hypotension in lower extremities. Arterial insufficiency: claudication & cold sensitivity. Collateral flow: internal 21 Diseases of the Heart Pulmonary valve stenosis Aortic valve stenosis & atresia mammary & axillary artery dilation. Occurs in isolation or in association with other anomalies. Complete pulmonic atresia: hypoplastic right ventricle & an atrial septal defect with blood entering lungs via a patent ductus arteriosus. Congenital complete aortic atresia is rare & incompatible with neonatal survival. Mild stenosis is generally asymptomatic. Infective endocarditis. Left ventricle hypertrophy. Poststenotic dilation of aortic root. Sudden death (rare). 22