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A Case Based Review of Cardiac Surgery Objectives for the MCC Qualifying Exam 2009 B-K Lam, MDCM University of Ottawa Heart Institute Objectives • Using demonstrative cases, this lecture will highlight the cardiac surgical aspects of the differential diagnoses included in the MCC qualifying exam objectives • MCC Objectives for the Qualifying Examination covered in this review: – Cardiac arrest (p. 13) – Chest discomfort (p. 14) – Dyspnea (p. 27) • Acute (p. 27-1) • Chronic (p. 27-2) – Diastolic murmur (p. 62-1) – Heart sounds pathological (p. 62-2) – Systolic murmur (p. 62-3) – Trauma • Chest injuries – heart injury (p.109-4) Case 1 • A 48 year-old man is awakened early in the morning by sharp anterior chest pain that radiates to his back. He presents to the emergency room several hours later reporting that his pain has subsided but he is very short of breath. His past medical history is significant for poorly controlled hypertension. On examination, BP is 150/40, P100, RR 24, 88% on 2L/min of O2. His cardiac exam is noticeable for an absent S2, a loud 4/6 diastolic murmur; he also has an accompanying systolic ejection murmur. You also notice that his left carotid pulse is weaker than his right. Case 1 - Questions • • • • • • • What is the differential diagnosis? Why is this patient short of breath? Why is his left carotid weak? What diagnostic tests would you order? In general, how do you classify this disorder? How would you classify it in this patient? What therapy would you implement in the emergency room? • How would you further manage this patient and why? “Top 3” DDx • • • • MI Aortic Dissection PE (Tension Pneumothorax) Acute dyspnea - Ddx • Cardiac – Ischemic heart disease (acute myocardial ischemia) – Myocardial dysfunction (congestive heart failure) • Ischemic/Hypertensive cardiomyopathy • Dilated (idiopathic, alcoholic, hemochromatosis) • Pericardial disease (tamponade) • Valvular (Mitral regurgitation, Aortic Insufficiency) • Pulmonary – Upper airway • Aspiration • Anaphylaxis – Ventilatory pump: • Pleura (pneumothorax), • Airways (bronchitis, bronchospasm) – Gas exchanger • Pulmonary embolus • Pneumonia (viral, bacterial, atypical, fungus) – ARDS • Vasculitis (Wegener, Goodpasture) – Respiratory control (metabolic acidosis, ASA toxicity) Weak L carotid • Dissection flap causing obstruction of true lumen Diagnostic Tests • • • • • • CK, TNt ECG CXR TEE CT MRI Classification Debakey A Stanford B What type of dissection • Stanford A • Debakey I or II Acute Management • Beta Blockade – Reduces wall stress on aorta – dP/dT – Rupture prevention • Antihypertensives – Reduces shear stress on the aorta – Anti-impulse/propagation therapy – Nitroglycerine – Nitroprusside Definitive Therapy • Surgery • Type A dissection is a surgical emergency • Terrible natural history: – “1%/hour” rule • 50% dead in 48 hours • 70% dead by 1 week • Medical Tx = 60% mortality rate – Modes of death • Rupture with hemopericardium, hemomediastinum or hemothorax • Organ dysfunction Case 2 • An 19 year old male is received a single stab wound to the chest outside a night club. He is brought to the ER, conscious and complaining of pain and shortness of breath. On examination, you observe a 3cm wound just left of his sternum in the 5th interspace. His BP is 85/60, P100, RR18, 95% on 2L/min of O2. His skin is slightly mottled and cool; his JVP is 8cm. By auscultation, air entry is fair bilaterally, heart sounds are muffled and peripheral pulses are weak. The rest of the physical is normal. Shortly after arriving in the patient becomes unresponsive. Pulses are not palpable, the monitor shows normal sinus rhythm. Case 2 - Questions • • • • What are the most concerning clinical signs? What is the diagnosis? What structure is most likely injured? What other structure should you be worried about? • Prior to arrest what diagnostic tests would you order? • What type of cardiac arrest is this and why has it occurred? • How would you manage the arrest? Concerning Clinical Signs • • • • • Hypotension Tachycardia Muffled heart sounds JVP elevated Weak peripheral Pulses CARDIAC TAMPONADE! Commonly injured • Right ventricular injury most common – Sits anteriorly in the mediastinum / LV posterior – RV 43%, LV 34%, RA 16%, LA 7% • Fatality rate 70-80% • Survival probability depends on: – Degree of anatomic injury – Occurrence of cardiac standstill • Beck triad only in 10-30% of tamponade cases • Pericardiocentesis: 80% false negative • FAST U/S: 95% sensitivity Associated Chest Injuries • Cardiac – Rule out LAD coronary artery injuries – Valvular injury • Lung (pneumo/hemothorax) • Tracheobronchial – 75-80% involvement of cervical trachea • Esophagus (<1%) • Diaphragm (45%) – 15% >2cm, 13% missed with 85% returning with hernia) • Thoracic great vessel (0.3-10%) – 90% due penetrating trauma, 71% hospital survival Diagnostic Tests • • • • • Labs ECG CXR Echo FAST U/S Cardiac Arrest • PEA arrest • Cardiac tamponade prevents adequate cardiac filling and subsequently cardiac output • This is not hypovolemia Arrest Management • • • • ABC’s Intubation CPR Manage underlying cause – 5H’s & 5T’s – ER thoracotomy – pericardiocentesis Copyright ©2005 American Heart Association Circulation 2005;112:IV-58-IV-66 Case 3 • An unrestrained 23 year old driver ran a red light and collided with another vehicle in a t-bone fashion. He is brought to the ER, conscious complaining of sternal pain. On examination, you observe bruising on his anterior chest. HR 115, BP 90/50 and RR15. The patient’s JVP is flat and lungs are clear. A CXR is performed and it shows a widened mediastinum, a pleural cap and a fracture of the first rib. Case 3 - Questions • Explain the physical findings. • What is your differential diagnosis? • What are the mechanisms of injury in blunt trauma? • What tests would you order? • What are the classic CXR findings for this condition? • What is the usual anatomy and mechanism of this injury? (Where does it occur and why?) • What is the initial management? • What are the definitive management options? Symptoms • Hypotension • Tachycardia • Low filling pressures • Hypovolemic shock Blunt thoracic trauma - Ddx • Aorta – Traumatic aortic disruption • Cardiac – Contusion – Rupture – MI • Pulmonary – – – – Pneumothorax Hemothorax Pulmonary contusion Tracheobronchial injury • Rib fracture/flail chest • Diaphragm rupture • Esophageal rupture Mechanisms of Injury • Compression – sternum and vertebrae • Fractured sternum – RV or aorta • Torsion: attachment points – – – – Vena cavae to RA PV’s to LA Origin of arch vessels Aortic isthmus • Rise in pressure – Chambers or valves Pretre et al NEJM 97 Investigations • • • • • • • CBC ECG CXR FAST U/S Echo/TEE CT Thorax (if stable) Angiogram CXR findings • Wide mediastinum (supine CXR > 8 cm; upright CXR >6 cm) • Obscured aortic knob; abnormal aortic contour • Left "apical cap" (ie, pleural blood above apex of left lung) • Large left hemothorax • Deviation of nasogastric tube rightward • Deviation of trachea rightward and/or right mainstem bronchus downward • Wide left paravertebral stripe Anatomy and Mechanism • Aortic isthmus • Deceleration • Greatest shear force Initial management • Advanced Trauma Life Support® (ATLS®) • ABCD • Secondary survey Definitive Management • Stat surgical consult as poor natural history • Conservative RX • Open repair vs Stent graft Surgery VS Stenting * • Endovascular stent: – Location beyond subclavian artery – Minimum of 5mm landing zone – Diameter <36mm – Absence of thrombus in fixation areas – Non-tortuous – Adequate access Case 4 • A surprisingly healthy and active 78 year old female presents to you with chest heaviness when she walks. On further questioning she admits to some dyspnea as well and she has been awakened from sleep with dyspnea several times recently. Her only past medical history is a hysterectomy. On physical examination, the BP is 100/80 and the pulse is 80 and regular but slow and delayed in quality. By auscultation, there is a 3/6 crescendodecrescendo systolic ejection murmur at the right upper sternal border with radiation to the neck. There is no diastolic murmur noted. The rest of the physical exam is normal. Case 4 - Questions • • • • • • • • What is your differential diagnosis? What investigations would you order? In order of prevalence, what are the three most common causes of aortic stenosis? In this patient, how do you explain the angina? Name the two most commonly used types of valves in aortic valve replacement surgery? List the advantages and disadvantages of the valves you identified in the previous question? How is Coumadin monitored? What are the respective therapeutic ranges for a patient with an aortic and mitral prosthesis? What type of valve would you recommend for this woman? Chronic Dyspnea - Ddx Cardiac • Valvular – Aortic Stenosis – MS, AI, MR • Ischemic – CAD with SEM • Cardiomyopathic Pulmonary • Muscles/nerves/chest wall • Lungs/Pleura – Restrictive • Airways – obstructive • Gas exchange Investigations • • • • • CBC CXR ECG Echo Angiogram AS Etiology • Acquired – Degenerative/Age related • Congenital – Bicuspid, unicuspid, quadracuspid • Rheumatic Angina in AS Supply Demand • Increased LVEDP • Hypertrophied therefore decreased • Increased LVEDP diastolic coronary flow • Decreased diastolic pressure Valve types • Mechanical • Bioprosthetic Pros & Cons • Mechanical – Pros: • Durability • Large EOA – Cons: • Require anticoagulation • Bioprosthetic – Pros: • Anticoagulation not required – Cons: • Limited durability • Smaller EOA Coumadin • Monitoring: – INR • Theraputic Range: – Mechanical Aortic 2.0-3.0 – Mechanical Mitral 2.5-3.5