Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting...

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Transcript of Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting...

Page 1: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 2: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC

Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient

Setting

No Financial Relationships to

Disclose

Page 3: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Case The patient is a 75 year old woman

who goes to see her PCP for a routine visit and is found on cardiac exam to have a murmur. The patient is relatively inactive and the most she does is walk around her house. She sometimes feels “weak” but does not report any obvious shortness of breath, angina, palpitations or syncope. She denies any significant PMH and no previous surgery. What to do next?

Page 4: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

ApproachHistory****Physical Exam****ElectrocardiogramChest x ray****ECHO****Stress testMRI/CT/Cardiac Catheterization

Page 5: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

HISTORY

Page 6: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

History of Present Illness/Family HistoryMay or may not be helpfulClinical scenario helpful (IV drug

abuse, h/o rheumatic fever or MVP)

Shortness of breath, syncope, palpitations, angina

FH of congenital heart diseasePrevious procedures (i.e.,previous

valve replacement)

Page 7: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Physical Examination

Page 8: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Physical ExamHeart SoundsPulses and pulse pressures,

differential, boundingCyanosis/clubbingHepatomegalyPalpable thrill***Murmur***

Page 9: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Origin of MurmurForward flow through a narrowed

or irregular orifice into a dilated vessel or chamber (stenosis)

Backward flow through an incompetent valve(regurgitation)

High blood flow through a normal or abnormal valve

Page 10: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 11: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 12: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 13: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 14: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 15: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

MurmursAortic Stenosis Mitral Regurgitation

Page 16: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

MurmurPathologic Innocent

Diastolic

Some systolic murmurs

High flow (younger pts, anemia, thyrotoxicosis)

Venous hums

Mammary souffles

Trivial or minimal systolic murmur

Page 17: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Murmur

Systolic DiastolicPansystolic

(holosystolic)Systolic

ejection (midsystolic)

Early systolicMid to late

systolic murmurs

Continuous murmurs

Early high-pitched diastolic murmurs

Middiastolic murmurs

Presystolic murmurs

Continuous murmurs

Page 18: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 19: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

8 Characteristics of Heart MurmurTiming in cardiac cycleIntensity (1 barely audible, 2 quiet but

obvious, 3 moderate, 4 loud, 5 louder heard with stethoscope barely off chest, 6 very loud heart without a stethoscope)

Location of maximal intensityShape (crescendo, decrescendo,

crescendo-decrescendo, plateau)Duration (pan-systolic, mid-systolic,etc)Radiation(axillary, carotids)Quality (blowing, musical, rumbling,

machinery)Pitch (high, medium or low)

Page 20: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Holosystolic MurmurWide pressure gradient throughout

systole

Mitral regurgitation/Tricuspid Regurgitation

High pitched blowing, holosystolic heard best at apex, radiating to axilla

Page 21: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Holosystolic MurmurMitral Insufficiency

Tricuspid Insufficiency

Page 22: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Holosystolic Murmurs

Page 23: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Midsystolic Usually crescendo-decrescendo murmurs

With increased ejection the murmur is louder, and subsides with relaxation

High flow rates with increased cardiac output

Harsh systolic, crescendo-decrescendo murmur heard right upper sternal border, radiates to carotids

Page 24: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

MidsystolicAortic Stenosis Pulmonic Stenosis

Page 25: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Early Systolic MurmurMuch less common and may be

difficult to hear

Acute MR

Page 26: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Early Systolic Murmur

Page 27: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Murmur

Chronic MR Acute MR

Page 28: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Late Systolic MurmurSoft or moderately loud, high

pitched sounds at LV apexMalcoaptation of mitral leafletsMVP late systolic murmurs with a

clickAdvanced aortic stenosis with

decreased or absent S2 and often S4

Page 29: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Late Systolic Murmur

MVP phonocardiogram

Page 30: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 31: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Early Diastolic MurmurOccurs shortly after S2 when

intraventricular pressure drops below aortic or pulmonary pressures

Aortic regurgitation or pulmonary regurgitation

Decrescendo murmurs, soft and in early diastole, high pitched, often faint and blowing quality

Heard best at left upper sternal border when patient is seated forward and during expiration

Page 32: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Early Diastolic Murmur

Acute AI AI

Page 33: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Middiastolic murmurMismatch between diastolic flow and

valve sizeMitral stenosis/Tricuspid stenosisASDSevere,chronic AR( Austin Flint)Left lateral lying position

Page 34: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Mid Diastolic MurmurMitral Stenosis

Mitral Stenosis

Page 35: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

PresystolicSound heard after atrial contraction

in diastole

Usually occur with mitral or tricuspid stenosis

Myxoma

Page 36: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Continuous MurmursOccur in of systole and persist the

into all are part of diastole High to low pressure gradients that

are present for end of systole and beginning of diastole

Persistent, Patent ductus arteriosisIntracardias Shunts

Page 37: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Continuous Murmurs

Patent Ductus Arteriosus

Page 38: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 39: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Benign systolic murmur

Page 40: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 41: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Echocardiography2D3D Color flowDoppler (CW and PW)TDI

Page 42: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

EchocardiographyValve Morphology FunctionAssociated chamber sizesVentricular functionAssociated hypertrophyPulmonary vein and hepatic vein

flow Pulmonary pressures

Page 43: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Purpose of EchocardiographyIdentify the primary source of

murmurDefine pressure

gradients/hemodynamicsDetect secondary lesionsEstablish a reference for

comparisons Chamber size and functionIn association with exercise in select

cases

Page 44: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

When Echo is probably not necessaryGrade 1 or 2 murmur in absence of

suspected endocarditisNormal systolic ejection patternNormal heart soundsNo suggestion of more severe heart

disease with provocative maneuvers

Page 45: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Echocardiography: IndicationsLevel 1CAsymptomatic patients with

diastolic murmurs, continuous murmurs, holosystolic,late systolic murmurs, murmurs associated with ejection clicks or murmurs that radiate to the neck or back

Murmurs with associated sxs or signs of heart disease

Asymptomatic with grade 3 or louder midpeaking systolic murmur

Page 46: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Class IIaUseful for evaluation of asymp pts

with murmur associated with other abnl cardiac physical findings (abnormal EKG or CXR)

Can be useful in patients whose signs/sxs are likely noncardiac in origin but cannot rule out cardiac basis

Page 47: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Class IIIGrade 2 or softer midsystolic

murmur (innocent murmurs)

Page 48: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

National Center for Health Statistics 1999-2009The number of transthoracic

echoes have grown by 90 % and TEE by 70%

JACC Vol.60 SupplNo. 25, 2012

Page 49: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 50: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Case The patient is a 75 yo woman who

goes to see her PCP for a routine visit and is found on cardiac exam to have a murmur. The patient is relatively inactive and the most she does is walk around her house. She sometimes feels “weak” but does not report any obvious shortness of breath, angina, palpitations or syncope. She denies any significant PMH and no previous surgery. What to do next?

Page 51: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Physical ExamBP 140/80 pulse 75

Carotid Upstroke is delayed and weak (pulsus tardus)

Mid to late peaking murmur is heard at RUSB radiating to carotids. S1 normal, S2 absent, and S4 heard

Page 52: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 53: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 54: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Should we get an echo? What’s the diagnosis?

Page 55: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Case

The patient is a 75 yo woman who goes to see her PCP for a routine visit and is found on cardiac exam to have a murmur. The patient is relatively inactive and the most she does is walk around her house. She sometimes feels “weak” and does report shortness of breath. She denies any significant PMH and no previous surgery. What to do next?

Page 56: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Physical Exam Anxious and tachypnic

BP 170/100 120, irreg RR 25

Brisk, irregular, and sharp, but weak carotid upstroke

Lungs: Rales heard throughout lung fields

Cardiac: Irregularly, Irregular and rapid, high pitched , blowing holosystolic 3/6 systolic murmur heard best at the apex

Page 57: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 58: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 59: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Do you want to get an echo? What’s the diagnosis?

Page 60: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Case

The patient is a 75 yo woman who goes to see her PCP for a routine visit and is found on cardiac exam to have a murmur. The patient is relatively inactive and the most she does is walk around her house. She sometimes feels “weak” but does not report shortness of breath, angina, palpitations or syncope. She denies any significant PMH and no previous surgery. What to do next?

Page 61: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Physical Exam120/80 pulse 60, regular

Normal Carotid upstroke

Regularly Rhythm Early Systolic ejection murmur heard at RUSB 2/6

Page 62: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Electrocardiogram

Page 63: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.
Page 64: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Do we need an echo?

Page 65: Richard J Gordon, MD., FACC Evaluation of Suspected Valvular Heart Disease in the Outpatient Setting No Financial Relationships to Disclose.

Questions?