650 likes | 1.03k Views
Overview of Valvular Heart Disease. January 28, 2006 David R. Richards, DO, FACC, FASE MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular Consultants Director, Heart Disease Management Program Riverside Hospital. Valve Disease: general concepts. Etiology and natural history Physical findings Therapy
E N D
Overview of Valvular Heart Disease January 28, 2006 David R. Richards, DO, FACC, FASE MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular Consultants Director, Heart Disease Management Program Riverside Hospital
Valve Disease: general concepts • Etiology and natural history • Physical findings • Therapy • types of surgical therapy • indications for surgery • indications for anticoagulation • antibiotic prophylaxis
Etiology of valve disease • “Secondary” valve disease • “Primary” valve disease
Etiology of valve disease • “Secondary” valve disease • Hypertension • CAD • Cardiomyopathy • “Primary” valve disease
Etiology of valve disease • “Secondary” valve disease • “Primary” valve disease • Calcific aortic stenosis • Rheumatic valve disease • Mitral prolapse / myxomatous mitral disease • Primary aortic regurgitation • Infective endocarditis
Diseases primary degenerative rheumatic endocarditis myxomatous congenital secondary CAD / cardiomyopathy Mechanisms Aortic stenosis Mitral stenosis Mitral regurg. Aortic regurg. Tricuspid regurg
Valvular Emergencies • Acute Endocarditis • Papillary Muscle Rupture • Flail Mitral Leaflet • Prosthetic Valve Thrombosis / Dehiscence
Valve disease: Diagnosis • Physical exam suggests diagnosis • Transthoracic Echo (TTE) confirms mechanism and severity of lesion • Transesophageal Echo (TEE) usually reserved to: • plan surgery • confirm borderline diagnosis/severity
S1 S2 systole diastole MV closure AV closure
Severe AS Mitral regurg MVP S1 S2 Mild AS
Mild AR Severe AR S1 S2 Mitral Stenosis
Valve disease: Management • Medical therapy ineffective • except: vasodilators for AR • Surgical therapy curative • Surgery for symptoms or LV dysfunction • Surgical trends: • minimally invasive surgery • valve repair • homograft use
Prosthetic Valves: selection Pros Cons • Bioprosthetic • Mechanical • Homograft • No Coumadin needed • Less thromboembolic complications • Lifelong cure • No Coumadin needed • Potential lifelong integrity Lifespan 10-15 yrs. Lifelong Coumadin 1% annual comp. Rate Limited availability ? Late failure Technically challenging
Prosthetic Valves: selection • Elderly pts.(lifespan < 15 yrs. • Contraindication to Coumadin • Elderly who already need Coumadin • All other patients • Young patients with Aortic Valve disease • Bioprosthetic • Mechanical • Homograft
Prosthetic Valves:types of dysfunction • Stenosis • degenerative • thrombosis • Regurgitation • Paravalvular • Transvalvular • Endocarditis • Mechanical Failure
High-risk procedure High-risk patient = + prophylaxis Valve disease: Management • Endocarditis prophylaxis
High-risk procedure High-risk patient + Endocarditis prophylaxis • Dental • GU • GI • Resp • *Congenital disease • *Prior endocarditis • *Prosthetic valves • Acquired valve disease • MVP with MR
Antibiotic Regimens Oral, Dental, Upper Resp Procedures: • Amoxicillin 2.0 gm p.o. • Alternative: • Clindamycin 600 mg p.o. • Cephalexin, Azithromycin GU, GI Procedures: • Ampicillin and Gentamycin • Alternative: Vancomycin
Case 1 • 36 year old male presents with palpitations. No past history. No meds. Sibling has heart murmur. • Exam: normal S1, S2. No murmur. Soft mid-systolic click. • EKG: normal except for PACs.
Case 1: 2D echo Findings: Posterior Leaflet Prolapse Mild (1+) Regurgitation
Mitral Valve Prolapse • A form of myxomatous valve disease • symptoms may be from: • mitral regurgitation • hyperadrenergic state • May progress to “surgical” MR • Often familial • Overdiagnosed clinically
Case 2 • 56 year old male with known heart murmur and MVP for 20 years. 3 days prior to admission, he had acute onset dyspnea and orthopnea. • Exam: pulse 110. 3/6 holosystolic murmur at apex. Bilateral crackles. • Labs: Troponin negative • EKG: sinus tachy • CXR: pulmonary edema
Case 2: TEE Findings: Severe MV prolapse Flail Posterior Leaflet Severe (4+) MR
Flail Mitral Valve Leaflet • A complication of myxomatous valve disease: rupture of chordae tendinae • Rarely from endocarditis, rheumatic, etc • Presents as severe MR with CHF • Accurately diagnosed with TEE • High untreated mortality • Accounts for 30 to 50 % of MV surgery • Highly amenable to valve repair
Mitral Regurgitation • Etiology: Chronic _ Myxomatous valve disease (MVP) • LV dysfunction, prior MI • Endocarditis, rheumatic disease • Etiology: Acute • Papillary muscle rupture s/p AMI • Chordal rupture (flail leaflet) • Acute endocarditis • Accurately diagnosed with TEE (mechanism, severity, reparability) • Surgery indicated for symptoms or LV dilatation/dysfunction • No role for med therapy
Case 3 • 53 y.o. female with chronic dyspnea. Atrial fib for 12 years. • Exam: • 4/6 blowing systolic murmur at apex with harsh component at LSB • harsh diastolic rumbling murmur • reduced S2, loud opening snap • prominent JVD
Case 3: 2D echo Findings: Rheumatic changes of MV Severe MS, Moderate AS Moderate MR
Mitral Valve Stenosis • A complication of acute rheumatic fever • Valve disease occurs 20 yrs after initial acute illness • Presents as exertional dyspnea and murmur • Complications: A.Fib., emboli, refractory pulmonary hypertension • Therapy: Commisurotomy or valve replacement
Case 3b • 72 y.o. female with dyspnea. • Exam: • 2/4 systolic murmur • Normal S1 and S2