Blood Flow through the Heart
Heart Sound and Anatomical Locations
S1 = Mitral/Tricuspid (AV) valve closure
S2 = Aortic/Pulmonic (Semilunar) Valve closure
Systole = Period between S1-S2
Diastole = Period between S2-S1
S3 Ken-Tuck-Y, increased fluid states (CHF, pregnancy)
*Leading abnormal heart sound in CHF
S4 Ten-Ne_SSee, stiff ventricular wall (MI, LVH, Chronic HTN)
Valvular Dz
Mitral Stenosis: Loud S1 murmur, mid-diastolic, apical crescendo
Mitral Regurg: S3 with systolic murmur at 5th ICS MCL (apex), may radiate to base or left axilla, musical, blowing or high pitched
Aortic Stenosis: Systolic, blowing, rough, harsh murmur at 2nd ICS, *usually radiates to neck*
Aortic Regurgitation: Diastolic, blowing murmur at 2nd left ICS
Mitral
Regurg
Pulmonic Mr. Pass
Aortic
Stenosis
Systolic Murmurs
When? Beginning is Systolic, end is diastolic
Where? Mid-chest, 5th ICS = Mitral
Upper Chest= Aortic
Murmur Grades
I: Barely audible
II: Audible but faint
III: Moderately loud, easily heard, No thrill
IV: Loud, associated with + thrill
V: Very loud, heard with one corner of stethescope off chest
VI: Loudest, from the doorway
*III=no thrill, IV=thrill
Heart Failure Types
Cardiac Output is insufficent to meet metabolic needs of body
Types:
Systolic: Inability to contract reuslts in decreased CO
-(inotrope, dig)
Diastolic: Inability to relax and fill results in decreased CO
-(Dilator to help relax)
Acute- (L) abrupt onset usually follows MI or valve rupture
Chronic (R) develops as result of inadequate compensatory mechanisms over time to improve cardiac output
Cardiac Definitions
Preload: Filling pressure of the heart at the end of diastole
Afterload: Pressure against which the heart must work to eject blood during systole
Contractility: Strength and vigor of heart’s contraction during systole
Cardiac Index: Volume of blood pumped by the heart based on BSA per minute (L/min)
NYHA Functional Classification of HF
I: No limitations
II Slight limitation with physical activity but comfortable at rest
III: Marked limitation of physical activity but comfortable at rest
IV: Severe, inability to carry out any physical activity without symptoms, symptoms noted at rest
Left Heart Failure (Acute)
*Left failure =Lung
Right Heart Failure (Chronic)
HF Diagnostics
HF Management Out-Patient
Non-Pharm
Pharm:
In-Patient Management of Acute Pulmonary Edema
HTN
Sustained elevation of SBP >140 or DBP > 90 at least 3 times on two different occasions
2 Types:
Exacerbating factors:
HTN Signs/Symptoms
HTN Diagnostics
Diagnostics to r/o:
U/A, CBC, BMP, Ca+, phos, uric acid, cholesterol, trigylcerides
ECG
PA and Lat CXR
JNC 7 Classifications
Normal <120 AND <80
Pre-HTN 120-139 OR 80-89
Stage I 140-159 OR 90-99
Stage II >160 OR >100
JNC 7 HTN Management- Non-Pharm
Life style changes:
Wight reduction
low sodium diet
avoid/reduce alcohol intake
relaxation/stress management
Exercise 30 min/day, most days week
JNC 7 HTN Management- Pharm
Stage I (SBP 140-159 or DBP 90-99)
Stage II (SBP >160 or DBP > 100)
With compelling indications:
*Goal=SBP<130/80 for pt’s with DM or CKD
*
Other HTN Pharm Considerations
Beta Bockers: effective for migraines and angina, in combination iwth diuretics, monitor for wheezing
CCB: Effective for Caucasians, not 1st line, monotherapy if BB contraindicated, effective for AF, ATach, migraine or DM
Diuretics: Effective for AA, elderly with isolated HTN, CHF (Lasix)
ACE “Pril”: Caucasians <65, **durg of choice in DM**, watch for cough and bronchospasm (in HF switch to ARB)
ARB: well tolerated
*Use as few meds as needed at lowest dose to get to desired goal*
JNC 8 Tx Threshholds
No classifications
Tx Threshholds
JNC 8 Important Recs
Lifestyle changes:
JNC 8 Common Pharm
Thiazide type diuretic-*1st line*
ACE “pril” cause vasodilation, block sodium water retention, watch for cough
ARB “sartan” - reserved for those with ACE intolerance
BB
CCB
Aldosterone antagonists/Central blockers/Alpha antagonists
Special considerations
*neither age nor gender affects agent responsiveness
HTN Urgency
SBP>180 or DBP >110 without target organ damage
Require BP reduction within hours to days
MAy be associated with HA, epistaxis, anxiety
Management
HTN Emergency
Rare situations that require immediate (w/in 1 hr) BP reduction to prevent or limit end organ damage
Generally SBP> 180/ DBP >120 with target organ dysfunction
*Initial tx goal to reduce MAP by no more than 25% w/in 2 hrs*
Management:
**AVOID rapid, severe drops in BP as cerebral infarction may occur**
Pressure should be lowered acutely to SBP 160-180 range then gradually with oral therapy over a period of days!