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مادة التطبيق البيطري/ د عالء كامل محمود.م فحص القلب واالوعية الدموية THE HEART AND CIRCULATORY SYSTEM Circulatory Dynamics The cardiovascular system consists of two main structural units, the heart and the blood vessels, which are jointly concerned in maintaining the circulation of the blood and thereby ensuring normal exchange of oxygen, carbon dioxide, electrolytes, fluid nutrients and waste products between the blood and the body tissues. The autonomic nervous system acts as an important regulator of the two components. Either component may fail to function in an efficient manner independently of the other. Of the two forms of circulatory failure, that involving the heart is due to intrinsic factors, while in peripheral circulatory failure there is defective venous return, the heart itself being normal. In heart failure two main effects are produced which are responsible for the clinical signs shown by the affected animal. Although both effects are produced simultaneously, one of them may be dominant, depending upon the speed at which failure occurs. These effects result from failure to maintain circulatory equilibrium and the nutrition of the tissues, most particularly the oxygen requirements of the brain. Circulatory equilibrium is deranged when the ventricular output is less than the venous return, and this persists for a significant period. If this occurs slowly, blood then accumulates in the veins and signs of congestive heart failure develop. If cardiac output is markedly reduced then the heart beat is suddenly arrested, producing acute heart failure. 1 Peripheral circulatory failure is brought about by reduction in blood volume, or by pooling of blood in the peripheral vessels as for example in splanchnic vasodilatation. The end results are similar to those of congestive heart failure although there is no primary defect of the heart itself, the venous return being effectively ejected. In the majority of animals, the heart has a considerable functional reserve which maintains circulatory equilibrium under circumstances of increased demand, such as those created by exercise and to a lesser degree by pregnancy, lactation and digestion. The increased demands are immediately met with by an increase in heart rate and an increase in stroke volume. If the demands remain at an elevated level, a degree of compensation may also be achieved through the development of cardiac hypertrophy. Cardiac reserve can be eroded by many pathological processes, chemotherapeutic compounds and excessive physical exertion. Diminution of cardiac reserve, which may be detected by assessing exercise tolerance, is the first stage in heart disease. In the next stage, when the cardiac reserve is completely lost, decompensation occurs with inability to maintain circulatory equilibrium. Regional Anatomy In all species of domestic animals the chest is flattened laterally, usually to a more marked degree in the lower two-thirds. The heart, suspended at its base by the great vessels which traverse the mediastinum, occupies a considerable part of the middle mediastinal region. The apex of the heart is situated in the midline above the sternum. In the horse the heart is asymmetrical in position, slightly more than half of the organ being on the left of the median plane. The base, which is directed dorsally, is situated on a level with the junction of the middle and dorsal thirds of the dorsoventral diameter of the thorax, and extends from opposite the second to the sixth intercostal space. The apex is positioned centrally about 1 cm above the last sternal segment, and about 2,5 cm anterior to the sternal diaphragm. The posterior border is nearly vertical and approximates to a position opposite the 2 sixth rib or interspace. The left surface of the heart, consisting almost entirely of the wall of the left ventricle, covered by the pericardium, is in contact with the lower third of the chest wall from the third to the sixth rib. The relationship between the heart and chest wall on the right side extends from the third to the fourth intercostal space only, because of the relatively small cardiac notch in the right lung, and the degree of cardiac asymmetry. Enlargement of the heart from any cause will proportionately increase the area of contact between the organ and the chest wall on the right side. Internally the heart contains four chambers through which the flow of blood is directed, and regulated, by valves situated at the entry or exit from the cavities. The right atrioventricular orifice, guarded by the tricuspid valve, is situated opposite the fourth intercostal space about 7 cm above the lower extremity of the fourth rib. The pulmonary orifice, guarded by the pulmonary semilunar valve, is opposite the third intercostal space immediately above the level of the right atrioventricular orifice. The left atrioventricular orifice, guarded by the mitral valve is situated opposite the fifth intercostal space about 10 cm above the sternal extremity of the fifth rib. The aortic orifice, guarded by its semilunar valve, is opposite the fourth intercostal space on a line level with the point of the shoulder. In cattle, the degree of cardiac asymmetry is slightly greater than in the horse. The base of the heart in this species extends from opposite the third to about the sixth rib. The apex, which is median in position and about 2 cm from the diaphragm, is opposite the articulation of the sixth costal cartilage with the sternum. The posterior border, which is almost vertical, is opposite the fifth intercostal space where it is separated from the diaphragm by the pericardium. On the left side, the heart and overlying pericardium are in contact with the chest wall from the third rib to the fourth intercostal space. On the right side the extent of the contact is limited to a small area opposite the ventral part of the fourth rib, and the adjacent third and fourth interspaces. The right atrioventricular orifice is opposite to the fourth rib almost 10 cm above the costochondral junction; the pulmonary orifice, which is slightly above this level, is opposite the third intercostal space; the left atrioventricular orifice is mainly opposite the fourth intercostal space, 3 and the aortic orifice is opposite the fourth rib, about 12 cm above the sternal extremity. In the dog the heart is placed so obliquely that the base, which is opposite the ventral part of the third rib, faces mainly in an anterior direction. The apex is blunt and positioned near the diaphragm on the left of the median plane, opposite the seventh costal cartilage. The area of contact between the heart and chest wall, through the overlying pericardium, on the left side, extends from opposite the ventral parts of the third to the sixth ribs. On the right side the area of contact is limited to that extending between the fourth and fifth ribs. Abnormal Types of Pulse In order to extend and amplify the clinical information already obtained by determining the pulse frequency and quality, attention should now be directed towards detecting pulse abnormalities and interpreting their possible significance. It must be appreciated that many of the variations from the normal pulse reflect the functional status of the heart which is influenced in a variety of ways. It should be remembered, however, that pulse characters can also be significantly affected by extracardiac factors, e.g. decreased amplitude because of reduced venous return as well as from reduced contractile power of the myocardium. Reflex acceleration of the heart occurs in painful conditions, e.g. spasmodic colic, as well as in febrile diseases. In toxaemic and septicaemic conditions all the circulatory components, including the myocardium, blood vessels and medullary reflex centres, may be involved. The myocardium and medullary reflex centres may also be influenced by hypoxia in various forms of anaemia and in diseases, such as pneumonia, which depress the pulmonary gaseous exchange. Diseases having the latter effect will also cause cardiac disturbance because of the increased resistance which develops in the pulmonary circulation. Other important abnormalities of the pulse are due to primary heart diseases, which may be functional or organic in character. Functional disease of the heart occurs when no readily recognizable pathological lesion is observed, 4 although it is probable that in many instances minute changes in structure or biochemical lesions exist. When cardiac disease is sufficiently severe to permit failure of circulatory equilibrium along with inadequate oxygen provision to meet the nutritional requirements of the tissues, obvious clinical signs will be presented by the animal. The basic character of the cardiac disease varies somewhat according to the species of animal involved. In the horse, organic disease of the heart is infrequently encountered (examples are endocarditis caused by Streptococcus equi, Actinobacillus equuli and migrating Strongylus spp. larvae, and pericarditis in occasional cases of strangles and of generalized infection by Strep. faecalis); the commonest type in this species is functional in character. In cattle organic heart disease, including subacute bacterial endocarditis, post-vaccinal endocarditis in calves (Mycoplasma mycoides), traumatic pericarditis, tuberculous pericarditis and the pericarditis that occurs in pasteurellosis, is the most usual type, although functional defects occur, sometimes only temporarily, as in severe haemolytic anaemia, parturient paresis, etc. Endocarditis, caused in lambs by Streptococcus spp. and Escherichia coli, and in older sheep by Erysipelothrix insidiosa, and the pericarditis of pasteurellosis are the most commonly encountered types of heart disease. In pigs, endocarditis caused by Streptococcus spp. and Erysipelothrix insidiosa, and pericarditis occurring in pasteurellosis, enzootic pneumonia, salmonellosis and in Glasser's disease are the commonest forms of heart disease encountered. In the dog, functional and organic disease of the heart are of equal occurrence. Disturbances of Pulse Rhythm Irregular pulse. In this type of pulse the intervals between the individual pulse waves vary in length. Irregularity of the pulse rhythm is invariably associated with variations in pulse amplitude; it is particularly well marked in atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, disorders of the cardiac intrinsic conduction mechanism and generalized myocarditis (true 5 arrhythmia). During the course and convalescent phases of diseases such as pneumonia and other severe febrile and toxaemic conditions that impose increased work load on the heart, an intermittent pulse is often a transitory feature; it also occurs with atrial and ventricular extrasystoles (produced when impulses capable of stimulating myocardial contraction originate at points apart from the sinoauricular node) caused by focal myocarditis, also in digitalis and chloroform intoxication and sometimes in space-occupying lesions of the brain. In these circumstances the irregular ventricular contractions may not always produce a pulse wave because of inadequate strength. The detection of a pulse deficit enables extrasystolic arrhythmia to be differentiated from heart block. During respiration the pulse rate in some species (particularly dogs) is appreciably more frequent during inspiration than during expiration (respiratory sinus arrhythmia). It is usually most marked when respiration is slow and deep. Sinus arrhythmia disappears on exercise or following the injection of atropine, if the animal is healthy, but if the pulse irregularity is the result of disease then it will, in many cases, become more obvious during severe dyspnoea. Intermittent pulse. In this type of pulse individual waves are absent from an otherwise regular sequence. According to whether the waves are dropped at regular intervals (e.g. every fourth wave) or not, the condition is described as a regularly or irregularly intermittent pulse. If there is a corresponding intermission in the heart beat, the condition is described as deficient pulse. When, in spite of the pause in the pulse, the heart beat occurs, although not strongly enough to produce a perceptible pulse wave, the term intermittent pulse is applied; here, obviously, the pulse rate is less than the heart rate. An intermittent pulse is caused by many of the same diseases as produce an irregular pulse, and is not infrequently encountered in apparently healthy animals, particularly thoroughbred horses in which it arises from partial atrioventricular node block (AV block). If any irregularity in the pulse is abolished by exercise, excitement or following the injection of atropine (inhibition of the vagus), the full effect of which 6 is obtained only some hours later, it may be concluded that the pulse deficit has no diagnostic significance unless it is accompanied by other signs of cardiac disease, when as a rule the pulse arrhythmia will be increased. Irregularity and intermission of the pulse may have various origins: irregular development of stimuli at the sinoauricular node (SA node block); irregular initiation of stimuli in the auricles (ectopic pacemakers) (atrial flutter and atrial fibrillation) and in the whole cardiac musculature (extrasystole) in focal myocarditis; and disturbances in the conduction of the contractile impulse from the atria to the ventricles (AV block). Disturbance in Pulse Quality Changes in pulse quality are attributable to variations in the stroke volume of the heart, in the venous return and in the activity of the reflex centres in the medulla. Pulse quality is classified according to certain characteristics recognized by palpation: Large strong pulse. In this pulse the artery is abnormally distended at each pulsation, the amplitude is greater than normal and the wave is not readily obliterated by digital pressure. It is indicative of persistent, or temporary, elevation of blood pressure (hypertension) and reflects increased cardiac stroke volume. This type of pulse may occur in athletic animals because of ventricular hypertrophy; it is also detected in the median artery of the horse in cases of acute laminitis, because of the inflammatory hyperaemia of the foot; and in dogs during the earlier stages of interstitial nephritis. It also appears transitorily after vigorous exercise. Small weak pulse. Here the artery is only poorly distended, and the pressure wave is readily obliterated by finger pressure. It reflects reduced stroke volume and occurs in myocardial asthenia, mitral incompetence or stenosis, aortic stenosis and partial occlusion of the artery at which the pulse is taken. In the last two, the pulse will show other characters such as being slow and prolonged (see below). 7 Soft pulse. The pulse wave is poorly developed and easily obliterated. It occurs when the myocardium is debilitated by general septic or toxaemic disease. Unequal pulse. The individual pulse waves vary in amplitude and, therefore, in strength, reflecting alterations in the stroke volume of the heart. It occurs characteristically in sinus arrhythmia and in extrasystolic arrhythmias. Asymmetrical pulse. This is a pulse that has different qualities on the right side of the body from those of the left, e.g. in unilateral vasodilatation, and in iliac thrombosis. Slight differences of this type are not uncommon in small animals. Alternate pulse exists when a strong wave alternates with a weaker one. Another form of alternating pulse occurs when there are groups of continually weakening waves interspersed by a few stronger waves. Both types of alternate pulse occur in severe cardiac weakness. Water-hammer or Corrigan's pulse. The pulse wave rises rapidly until the artery is overdistended, and then collapses equally quickly (Fig. 25c, p. 31). The wave is not readily obliterated. It is pathognomonic of either insufficiency of the aortic valves or patency of the ductus arteriosus. A form of this pulse occurs in severe anaemia as a result of the very low arterial blood pressure. Slow pulse. The pulse pressure wave rises slowly and collapses again in a similar manner (Fig. 25d, p. 31). The artery is only moderate distended. It occurs in stenosis of the aortic valve, complete A-V block and sometimes in space-occupying lesions of the brain. It should not be confused with infrequent pulse resulting from bradycardia. Hard pulse. The wall of the artery is tense and hard, and the pulse wave is not readily obliterated. It occurs in diseases associated with hypertension (nephritis), pain, increased muscular tone (tetanus) and local hyperaemia (laminitis). Wiry pulse. This pulse is hard and, at the same time, small. It occurs when there is some degree of vasoconstriction. A wiry pulse is 8 associated with painful diseases such as acute pleurisy, acute peritonitis, acute and subacute endocarditis, the early stages of acute pericarditis and intestinal volvulus. Thready pulse. The pulse wave is small and readily obliterated. Its significance is similar to that of wiry pulse although it may indicate that the disease may have an unfavourable termination. This indication is more clearly presented when repeated examinations reveal that the pulse rate is progressively increasing, and that the amplitude is decreasing, thus producing the so-called 'running down' pulse. Dicrotic pulse. This type of pulse is appreciated only in very rare instances. Following closely upon the main pulse wave, a second wave is perceptible (caused by the slight, temporary rise in blood pressure following closure of the aortic semilunar valves). It occurs in prolonged and acute fevers, but sometimes occurs in the absence of demonstrable disease. In the vast majority of animals the dicrotic pressure wave is dissipated within a short distance of the heart. Fremitus, i.e. a vibration or shaking of the arterial wall, instead of a pulse wave, occurs when the lumen is reduced (arterial thrombosis, congenital stenosis, stretching or kinking), in arteriovenous aneurysm of the spermatic artery of the bull, in parasitic aneurysm of the anterior mesenteric artery of the horse and in the middle uterine artery of the cow in late pregnancy. Distension of the Veins Jugular Pulse In many animals, engorgement of the jugular vein produces movement which may be observed to involve that section of the vein which is situated subcutaneously in the jugular furrow. This is described as a jugular pulse. It may be negative or positive. A negative jugular pulse occurs during the early part of cardiac systole when the blood, being temporarily unable to enter the contracted right 9 atrium, is dammed back in the jugular vein. This type of jugular pulse takes the form of distension of the proximal part of the jugular vein, arising presystolically, i.e. before the heart contracts, and gradually extending from the lower part of the vein forwards. It is physiological, readily observed in lean animals and particularly common in cattle. Negative jugular pulse is exaggerated in tricuspid stenosis, heart block and exudative pericarditis. Positive jugular pulse consists of true pulse waves which run forward from the shoulder towards the angle of the jaw. These regurgitation waves are not only visible but are palpable as moderately strong impulses. Positive jugular pulse occurs in tricuspid incompetence because, during cardiac systole, the blood in the right ventricle is forced backwards through the incompletely closed valvular orifice into the right atrium and the jugular vein. In lacting cattle affected with tricuspid valve insufficiency, a positive pulse may be detected also in the subcutaneous abdominal (mammary) vein. This type of jugular pulse is systolic and coincides with the arterial pulse; it is pathognomonic of tricuspid valve incompetence. The existence of positive jugular pulse is indicated if, following the application of digital pressure to the vein in the region of the larynx, the engorgement disappears only after two or more cardiac cycles. In lean animals, the pulsation of the underlying carotid artery, noted particularly at the entrance to the thorax, may be transmitted to the overlying tissues and thereby simulate a positive jugular pulse. This condition, which is termed false jugular pulse, is not obliterated by compression of the jugular vein, whereas a true positive jugular pulse will disappear. Venous Stasis The state of the venous system can be assessed by observing the jugular vein, the smaller cutaneous veins, the auricular veins, the spermatic and the subcutaneous abdominal veins. In long-coated animals, venous distension is detected by palpation. In thin-skinned horses, such as 10 thoroughbreds and hunters, when the coat is short, temporary distension of the superficial veins is readily seen after active exertion. Persistent dilatation of superficial veins occurs in all conditions in which there is obstruction to the flow of blood on the venous side of the blood vascular system. It is constantly present when the flow of blood into the right side of the heart is delayed by incomplete emptying of the organ during the preceding systolic contraction. It occurs in myocardial dystrophy, heart block and cardiac and mediastinal neoplasia; in endocarditis; in congenital defects including patent interventricular septum, patent foramen ovale, patent ductus arteriosus, and fibroelastosis; in pericarditis and hydropericardium; and in pneumonia, chronic alveolar emphysema, overdistension of the abdomen, etc. (Fig. 125). In the broken-winded horse, the veins become distended after only a short period of exercise, and remain dilated for much longer than in the healthy animal, indicating the severity of the dyspnoea and its influence on the pulmonary circulation and the heart. Occasionally, however, engorgement of the veins may be the result of a purely local condition, e.g. compression of a vein by a tumour or by a superficial inflammatory process. In myocardial asthenia, if distension of the jugular and other large superficial veins is not already obvious, digital compression will rapidly produce very marked dilatation. In vasogenic failure, occurring in toxaemia and shock, the jugular vein is not engorged although the total blood volume is normal, and digital compression slowly produces only a slight distension of any of the superficial veins. In quiet dogs, the degree of venous stasis may be estimated by placing the animal in lateral recumbency, repeatedly raising the recurrent tarsal vein by digital compression and releasing the pressure with the leg held at various levels relative to the heart. If venous pressure is normal, and the animal is in a relaxed state, the vein should collapse rapidly when pressure is released with the limb at any level above that of the heart. Cyanosis is bluish discoloration of the skin and mucous membranes caused by abnormally increased amounts of reduced haemoglobin in the circulating blood. In animals it is most readily detected in the 11 conjunctival and gingival mucosae. In all cases the haemoglobin concentration shows little or no variation from normal, but the oxygen tension of the arterial blood is low. Cyanosis is present in all types of hypoxic hypoxia and in stagnant hypoxia, but not in anaemic hypoxia. The existence of cyanosis can be determined by noting that the bluish discoloration disappears temporarily when pressure is applied to the mucosae or skin and the blood flow is stopped. Methaemoglobinaemia is distinguished by noting that the discoloration of the mucosae and the skin is brown rather than blue. A varying degree of cyanosis occurs in all forms of heart disease; it is most obvious in congenital heart defects and less so in acquired heart disease. In pulmonary disease, cyanosis is rarely very obvious because the circulation is impeded proportional to the degree of lung dysfunction. When venous engorgement persists it will cause oedema, usually anasarca, ascites, hydrothorax and hydropericardium. The anasarca is limited to the dependent parts, including the ventral surface of the thorax and abdomen, the neck and the lower jaw. In severe congestion the liver is enlarged to a varying degree, so that in the dog and cat the thickened border of the organ can be palpated behind the right costal arch. 12