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Transcript
4/19/2012
HEART MURMURS
THROUGHOUT
CHILDHOOD
Frances R. Zappalla, D.O.
Nemours Cardiac Center
A.I. du Pont Hospital for Children
Wilmington, DE
HEART MURMURS
Definition:
An extra abnormal heart sound
usually detected while listening to
the heartbeat with a stethoscope.
2
PARENTAL ANXIETY…….
• Anxiety about need for medication (49%)
• Sports restrictions (41%)
• Cardiac surgery (29%),
• Cardiac risk for siblings (20%)
• Premature death (13%).
• 19% of mothers felt the murmur resulted from
something they did wrong during pregnancy.
• After reassurance from the cardiologist, 7% of parents
had persistent anxiety
J Pediatr. 2002 Jun;140(6):747-52
3
1
4/19/2012
HEART MURMURS
• Most systolic murmurs in otherwise healthy
children are innocent and do not need a
referral………...however, see the previous slide.
• If findings are suspicious or in the present of
parental anxiety…. referral for a cardiology office
visit is more cost effective than ordering an
echocardiogram alone
ECHO ONLY…
• Slightly more than half of echocardiography studies (68%)
•
performed in adult laboratories were technically adequate
• Of those 52% had the correct diagnosis
• 16% incorrect diagnosis
Repeat echocardiography in 38%
• Abnormalities not diagnosed correctly in 14%
• 6 had important lesions
• Normal hearts were labeled as abnormal in 18%
RA Hurwitz et al Peds 1998
DIASTOLIC MURMURS ARE
PATHOLOGIC UNTIL PROVEN
OTHERWISE
2
4/19/2012
AUSCULTATION AREAS
• RUSB – Aortic
• LUSB – Pulmonic
• LLSB – TV, Septum
• Apex - MV
Fetal
Circulation
The colors
indicate
the oxygen
saturation
of the blood.
The arrows show
the course of the
fetal circulation.
FETAL CIRCULATION
•
55 % of the highly saturated umbilical venous returns via
ductus venous to IVC - RA junction
• preferentially crosses the foramen ovale into the left
atrium
• Highest oxygen content diverted to coronary
arteries and the brain
•
Remaining umbilical venous flow, portal venous blood, and
SVC flow crosses the tricuspid valve
3
4/19/2012
Circulation
after Birth
Arrows
indicate the
course of the
neonatal
circulation.
TRANSITIONAL CIRCULATION
• Clamping of Umbilical cord
• Removes the low resistance placenta
• Decreases ductus venous flow and systemic venous
return to IVC
• Increases systemic resistance
• Spontaneous respiration
• Decreases pulmonary vascular resistance
• Increases pulmonary venous return to LA
TRANSITIONAL CIRCULATION
• Increased pulmonary venous return
• Increases in LA pressure
• Flap valve of foramen ovale closes
• PDA closes within 10 to 15 hours
4
4/19/2012
PULSE OXIMETRY
• 20,055 newborn babies were screened
• 53 had major congenital heart disease (24 critical)
• Prevalence of 2·6 per 1000 livebirths.
• Sensitivity of pulse oximetry 75·00% (95% CI) for critical cases
• 49·06% for all major congenital heart defects.
• False-positive results noted for 169 (0·8%)
• 6 cases were significant, but not major, CHD
• 40 were other illnesses that required urgent medical intervention.
• The prevalence of major CHDs with normal pulse oximetry was 1.4 per
1000 live births
• Ewer et al LANCET 2011
NEONATES AND INFANTS
LOW-RISK GROUP
• Otherwise well - no symptoms and no other signs
• Alert, active, feeding well, gaining weight
• Normal pulses, heart rate, respiratory rate and liver
size.
• Normal blood pressures in all extremities
• Normal pulse oximeter saturation in upper and lower
extremities in room air
NEONATES AND INFANTS
RED FLAGS
• Comfortable Tachypnea
• Diminished pulses
• Poor feeding
• Poor weight gain
• Pulse Oximetry <90%
5
4/19/2012
BENIGN MURMURS
IN THE NEONATE
• Physiologic peripheral pulmonary stenosis
• Transient patent ductus arteriosus murmur
• Tricuspid regurgitation murmur
• Flow Murmurs
PERIPHERAL PULMONARY STENOSIS
• Physiologic
• Grade 1-2/6 systolic ejection murmur
• Heard best in the upper left sternal border but
radiates well to the axilla and back
• Most resolved within 6 weeks
• Remainder by 6 months
TRANSIENT PATENT DUCTUS
ARTERIOSUS
• Closing ductus arteriosus
• Usually a systolic ejection murmur of 1-2/6 intensity
• Heard best in the left upper sternal border
• Usually heard at 24-48 hours of life and….. usually
has disappears by the time the cardiologist comes to
listen
6
4/19/2012
TRICUSPID REGURGITATION MURMUR
• Infants with fetal distress or perinatal asphyxia
• Holosystolic murmur due to high right
ventricular systolic pressure
• Sounds like a small ventricular septal defect
PATENT FORAMEN OVALE
• Normal structure
• Functional closure
• occurs after birth as left atrial pressure
exceeds right atrial pressure
• Right to left shunting
• may occur in neonatal period causing
peri-oral cyanosis
7
4/19/2012
PATHOLOGICAL MURMURS
• Most Common
• Ventricular septal defect
• Pulmonary stenosis
• Aortic stenosis
PATHOLOGICAL MURMURS
• AV valve insufficiency in Complete AV Canal
defect
• Tetralogy of Fallot
• Coarctation of the aorta
• Ebstein’s Anomaly
CHD WITHOUT MURMURS
• Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
• Tricuspid Atresia
• Critical Coarctation
• Interrupted aortic arch
• Complete Common AV canal
8
4/19/2012
APPROACH TO THE
CYANOTIC CHILD
• Pre- and post-ductal saturations
• measured on right arm and either leg
• detects shunting across the ductus arteriosus
• Arterial Blood Gas(es)
• Chest X-ray
• 12-lead ECG
APPROACH TO THE CYANOTIC CHILD
• Hyperoxia test:
• Document PaO2 in room air
• Administer 100% FiO2 for 10 minutes
• Repeat PaO2
in 100 % O2
PaO2 > 300 suggests
intrapulmonary shunt
PaO2 < 150 suggests
intracardiac shunt
APPROACH TO THE CYANOTIC NEONATE
Suspected Congenital Heart Disease
• Referral for pediatric cardiology evaluation
•
•
•
in-house consult
transport to tertiary center
Telemedicine
• Echocardiography for detailed anatomic diagnosis
• Medical management and surgical strategies based on
anatomic diagnosis
9
4/19/2012
VENTRICULAR SEPTAL DEFECTS
• Most common form of CHD
• 1.5 to 3.5 per 1000 term infants
• Slightly more common in females
• Most common defect in chromosomal syndromes
however……
• 95% of VSD not associated with chromosomal anomaly
LOCATION OF VSD
Perimembranous - most common (80%)
Muscular (5-20%)
PV
Subpulmonary
TV
Subaortic
Anterior
Inlet – AV canal type VSD (5-8%)
Apex
VENTRICULAR SEPTAL DEFECT
• Small ventricular septal defects
• Large ventricular septal defect
• NO murmur until pulmonary vascular
resistance drops
10
4/19/2012
AORTIC AND PULMONARY STENOSIS
• Murmurs may be heard soon after birth and
persist
• Usually preceded by an ejection click
• Constant with aortic stenosis
• Louder during expiration with pulmonic
stenosis
PULMONARY VALVE STENOSIS
• Usually asymptomatic
• Variable systolic ejection click at LUSB
• Grade 2-5/6 SEM at LUSB to lung fields
• Soft, delayed pulmonary component of S2
• May have increased RV impulse and thrill
• ECG: RVH
BALLOON
VALVULOPLASTY
11
4/19/2012
BENIGN MURMURS IN CHILDREN
• Stills Murmur
• Venous Hum
• Pulmonary Flow Murmur
STILL'S MURMUR
• Grade 1-2/6, musical or vibratory in nature
• Heard best at the lower left sternal border
• Murmurs are accentuated by
• anemia
• fever
• increased cardiac output
VENOUS HUM
• Varies with neck position and compression
• Diff Dx of Continuous murmurs :
•PDA, shunt, AV fistula
S1
S2
S1
12
4/19/2012
PATHOLOGIC HEART MURMURS
IN THE ADOLESCENT
• Atrial Septal Defects (ASD)
• Mitral valve prolapse (MVP)
• Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM)
• Rheumatic heart disease (RHD)
ATRIAL SEPTAL DEFECTS
SVC
Secundum ASD and
PFO
Sinus Venosus ASD
Primum ASD
IVC
13
4/19/2012
ASD
PULMONARY FLOW MURMUR
•
Systolic flow murmur
•
Systolic flow murmur
•
Widely split S2
•
Split S2
•
Increased P2
•
Normal P2
•
rsR’ in V1
•
May have rsR’ in V1
•
Right Axis deviation
•
Normal Axis deviation
•
Right Arial Enlargement
•
Normal P waves
CLASSIC ASD ECG
ASD CLOSURE
14
4/19/2012
MITRAL VALVE PROLAPSE
• Mid-systolic click at LLSB, maximal in upright
position
• + late systolic regurgitant murmur at apex
• Look for associated skeletal abnormalities
• slender stature, scoliosis, pectus excavatum
• Marfan syndrome
MITRAL VALVE PROLAPSE
• Diagnosis often over-called
• Prognosis generally excellent
• Potential complications:
• Mitral valve regurgitation
• SBE
• Arrhythmia
• Central neurologic ischemic events
• High risk subset of patients:
• Males, age > 45
• Presence of MR & leaflet thickening
15
4/19/2012
HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY
• Most common cause of sudden death in US (35%)
• Sudden death usually occurs in teens and young adults
< 35 years of age
• Occurs in about
2% (1:500) of general population
• Autosomal Dominant with > 400 mutations on 12 genes
• Variable expression and clinic course
• Competitive golf is permitted under guidelines
HYPERTROPHIC
CARDIOMYOPATHY
• Hyperdynamic precordium
• Murmur varies with maneuvers
• SEM at the LSB
• Softer with Hand-grip/ Louder with release
• Standing increases murmur /Squatting
decreases murmur
• History of SOB or chest pain WITH exertion
• Family history of sudden death in a young
relative
HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY
• Often don’t develop hypertrophy until 14-17
years old
• Absence of hypertrophy does NOT rule
out HCM
• 90% have ECG changes which often
precede echo findings
• Commercially available Genetic testing
(50-60% yield)
16
4/19/2012
Histopathology of
heart sections
showing
significant
myofibre disarray
and interstitial
fibrosis in HCM
Cell Research (2003) 13, 9–
20
17
4/19/2012
HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY
ACUTE RHEUMATIC FEVER
• New murmur or new onset of heart failure
(tachypnea, S3 gallop, pulmonary edema)
• Murmur of mitral regurgitation at apeX
• Diastolic decrescendo murmur of aortic regurgitation
• Pancarditis- can involve pericardium, myocardium
and/or valves
ACUTE RHEUMATIC
FEVER
18
4/19/2012
JONES CRITERIA
•
Evidence of recent Group A hemolytic Strep infection
• Plus 2 major or one minor criteria
MAJOR
MINOR
Carditis
Athralgia
Polyarthritis
Syndenham’s chorea
Fever
Erythema marginatum
Prolonged PR interval
Elevated acute phase reactants
Subcutaneous nodules
55
13 YEAR OLD WITH SEVERE
MITRAL REGURGITATION
NEW ENDOCARDITIS
RECOMMENDATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Prosthetic material used for cardiac valve repair
Previous endocarditis
Unrepaired cyanotic CHD, including palliative shunts and conduits
Completely repaired congenital heart defect with prosthetic material
or device(surgical or catheter intervention ) for the first 6 months after
the procedure
Repaired CHD with residual defects at the site or adjacent to the site
of a prosthetic patch or prosthetic device
Cardiac transplantation recipients who develop cardiac valvulopathy
19
4/19/2012
SUMMARY
• Most murmurs in childhood are innocent
• In sick patients – the ECG and CXR will
help differentiate a flow murmur due to
fever versus a pathologic murmur
• When in doubt…. Feel free to call for help
20