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Valvular Heart Disease • • • • • • Asymptomatic 62 y/o male Long-standing heart murmur 2/6 SEM at base of heart PMI and carotid upstroke normal S2 splits normally ECG, CXR normal Valvular Heart Disease • What would you do at this time? – Refer to cardiologist – Order an echocardiogram – Follow without further testing until symptoms develop Is the Murmur Significant? • Is the patient symptomatic? • Are symptoms consistent with cardiac limitation? • Is there chamber or cardiac enlargement on CXR or examination? • Is there LVH or RVH on present ECG? Clues from the Circulatory System • Jugular venous pulse • Carotid upstroke: brisk, delayed or weak? • Peripheral pulses and pulse pressure • Apical impulse: displaced, sustained or normal? • Right ventricular lift • Thrill • Heart rate and rhythm Innocent Cardiac Murmurs • • • • • Midsystolic (never diastolic) A2 heard clearly Crescendo-decrescendo Variable intensity (grade 1-2/6) Does not radiate widely Useful Maneurvers • Valsalva: decreased venous return during Phase 2 • Squat-Stand: Decreased venous return like Valsalva • Sustained Hand Grip: increased SVR, increased cardiac output, increased BP The Second Heart Sound • Normal: Single S2 in expiration • Wide: Right bundle branch block, RV pacing • Fixed: ASD/common atrium • Paradoxic: Left bundle branch block Bedside Diagnosis of Pulmonary Hypertension • P2 > A2 with P2 heard at LV apex • Secondary findings of tricuspid insufficiency, elevated CVP, pedal edema • Appropriate clinical situation: known CHF, severe lung disease, loud heart murmur, cardiac arrhythmia Most Common Misdiagnosed Systolic Murmurs • • • • • Mild Aortic Stenosis Mild Pulmonic Stenosis Atrial Septal Defect Mitral Valve Prolapse Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Question: Who warrants SBE prophylaxis? SBE Prophylaxis-2007 Guidelines • • • • Prosthetic cardiac valve Previous infectious endocarditis Complex congenital heart disease Cardiac transplantation recipients who develop cardiac valvulopathy Valvular Heart Disease Mild to Moderate Aortic Stenosis • Yearly history and physical examination • Focus on symptoms of angina, CHF, near syncope • Echocardiogram q 3-5 years (peak velocity < 3 M/sec) Valvular Heart Disease:Moderate to Severe Aortic Stenosis • • • • Annual history and physical examination Angina, CHF or near syncope? Echocardiogram yearly Peak velocity > 3 M/sec Pulmonic Stenosis • Congenital lesion with systolic ejection click • Systolic ejection murmur at left upper sternal border • Infraclavicular radiation • Right ventricular lift Atrial Septal Defects • Primum ASD: Associated with cleft mitral valve and marked LAD on ECG • Secundum ASD: Most common with female predominance • Sinus venosus ASD: Associated with partial anomalous venous return • All have wide/fixed split of S2 MVP: A Syndrome with Too Many Names • • • • • Myxomatous mitral valve prolapse Click/murmur syndrome Floppy mitral valve syndrome “Classic” MVP Barlow’s Syndrome History of Mitral Valve Prolapse • • • • 1962 Barlow describes MVP syndrome 1970 VPC’s and sudden cardiac death 1976 Prevalance 5-15%??? 1986 High risk markers for MVP complications identified • 1989 Saddle shaped mitral annulus described MVP: Clinical Exam • • • • • • • Non-ejection click Mid-to-late systolic click Pansystolic murmur Mid-to-late systolic murmur Precordial “Honk” Changes with maneuvers “Silent” MVP Complications of MVP Syndrome • • • • • Ruptured chorda tendiniae Progressive mitral insufficiency Subacute bacterial endocarditis Sudden cardiac death Transient ischemic attacks Complications in Classic and Nonclassic Mitral Valve Prolapse Nonclassic (N=137) 0 P Value SBE Classic (N=319) 3.5% (11) Severe MR 11.9% (30) 0 <0.001 MV surgery 6.6% (21) 0.7% (1) <0.02 TIA/stroke 7.5% (24) 5.8% (8) ns <0.02 Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy • May occur with or without dynamic LVOT obstruction • Systolic ejection murmur at lower left sternal border • Murmur increases during Phase 2 of Valsalva • Bisferiens pulse Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Treatment: General Guidelines • Physical Activity: Avoid strenuous activity (no competitive sports), avoid dehydration • Endocarditis Risk: Dental care • Genetic Counseling: Screen first degree relatives, pregnancy counseling Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Treatment • General guidelines • Medical therapy: Beta blockers, Ca channel blockers • Catheter based septal ablation • Surgical myectomy • AICD implantation HCM: ECG from 1995 HCM: ECG from 2002 HCM: ECG from January 2010 Is the Murmur Significant? • Is the patient symptomatic? • Are symptoms consistent with cardiac limitation? • Is there cardiac enlargement or chamber enlargement on CXR or exam? • Is there LVH or RVH on ECG?