Assessment of cardiac fxn
Diagnostics for CV dysfxn
Cardiac Catheterization
Advance a cath thru a vein into the heart to diagnose or do intervention
- often go in on right side bc safer and better access to heart
Cath pre-op care
Cardiac cath post-op
D/C planning after cardiac cath
Dev differences in infants
Function of the foramen ovale
Hole in infants that allows blood to pass directly from right atrium to left without going into the lungs
Ductus venosus
Hole in infants that allows blood to go from the umbilical vein to the inferior vena cava, bypassing the liver
Fetal circulation
Oxy blood goes through umbilical vein to liver and divides–half to liver and half to inferior vena cava via ductus venosus (which closes after birth) then into right atrium, thru the foramen ovale, left atrium, left ventricle, aorta, full body
Ductus arteriosus
Bypass lungs; fetal hole that shunts blood returning to the heart from the right atrium to the descending aorta, which connects to the umbilical arteries and sends blood back to the placenta
Why does the fetal heart have holes?
Lungs and liver are underdeveloped so the holes bypass these areas
Placenta
Organ in the uterus (womb) that connects to the infant’s umbilical cord; umbilical veins and arteries end here and it helps pass waste products and CO2 to pass to the mother’s circulation to be cleansed
Fetal shunts
Holes that close at birth or shortly after bc dec maternal hormone prostaglandin E, inc O2 saturation from baby first breath, and pressure changes in the heart
Clinical findings for cardiac defects
Cardiac hemodynamics
blood enters R atrium, thru tricuspid valve, R ventricle, out the pulmonary valve/artery to the lungs; comes back in through the pulmonary veins, left atrium, mitral valve (bicuspid), left ventricle, aortic valve/aorta (ride TRIcycle before BIcycle)
Which side of the heart has more pressure and why does it matter?
Left has more pressure–if hole between the ventricles, blood flows from higher pressure to lower pressure
2 major effects of CHD
clinical consequences of left-right shunting
Congestive heart failure causes
inability of heart to pump enough blood to meet body’s demands
- volume overload (most common in kids from defects)
- pressure overload
- dec contractility
- high cardiac output demands
CM of pulmonary venous congestion
CM of systemic venous congestion
hepatomegaly, ascites, edema, wt gain, neck vein distention
CM of impaired myocardial fxn
inc HR, low BP, weak peripheral pulse, extended cap refill, pallor, cool extremities, low urine, gallop rhythm, fatigue, restless, enlarged heart, sweat, high metabolic weight–FTT
Therapeutic goals for CFH