Contents
- Cardiac Anatomy & Physiology
- Hemodynamic Monitoring
- Acute Coronary Syndrome
- Cardiogenic Shock
- Shock Categories & Classification
- Heart Failure
- Cardiomyopathies
- Valvular Disorders & Heart Sounds
- Vascular Emergencies
- ACS & MI Detailed Management
- Peripheral Vascular Disorders
- Structural Heart Disease & Emergencies
- Cardiac Cycle Dynamics
- Cardiac Waveforms & Hemodynamic Monitoring
Cardiac Anatomy & Physiology
Core Goals of the Cardiovascular System
- Primary goal: Deliver oxygen to tissues and remove metabolic waste
- Oxygen Delivery (DO2) depends on cardiac output and arterial oxygen content
- Oxygen consumption (VO2) must be balanced with delivery
- When demand exceeds supply: ischemia develops, potentially leading to infarction
Heart Structure
- Four chambers: Right atrium, Right ventricle, Left atrium, Left ventricle
- Four valves: Tricuspid (right AV), Pulmonary (right semilunar), Mitral/Bicuspid (left AV), Aortic (left semilunar)
- Right side: Low-pressure system, pumps deoxygenated blood to lungs
- Left side: High-pressure system, pumps oxygenated blood to body
- Heart wall layers: Epicardium (outer), Myocardium (muscle), Endocardium (inner lining)
Coronary Circulation
- Left main coronary artery branches into LAD and Circumflex
- LAD supplies anterior wall and septum
- Circumflex supplies lateral and posterior walls
- Right coronary artery (RCA) supplies inferior wall and SA/AV nodes in most people
- Coronary perfusion occurs primarily during diastole
- Coronary Perfusion Pressure = Diastolic BP - PAOP (or LVEDP)
Electrical Conduction System
- SA Node: Primary pacemaker (60-100 bpm)
- AV Node: Delays impulse for ventricular filling (40-60 bpm)
- Bundle of His β Bundle Branches β Purkinje fibers (20-40 bpm)
- Cardiac cell properties: Automaticity, Excitability, Conductivity, Contractility
Hemodynamic Monitoring
Key Hemodynamic Parameters
- Blood Pressure = Cardiac Output Γ Systemic Vascular Resistance
- Cardiac Output (CO) = Heart Rate Γ Stroke Volume (normal: 4-8 L/min)
- Cardiac Index (CI) = CO Γ· Body Surface Area (normal: 2.5-4.0 L/min/mΒ²)
- Stroke Volume determined by: Preload, Contractility, Afterload
Preload
- Definition: Ventricular wall stretch at end-diastole (volume)
- Right heart preload measured by CVP/RAP (normal: 2-6 mmHg)
- Left heart preload measured by PAOP/PCWP (normal: 8-12 mmHg)
- Frank-Starling Law: Increased stretch = increased contractile force (to a point)
- Causes of increased preload: Fluid overload, heart failure, renal failure
- Causes of decreased preload: Hypovolemia, vasodilation, diuresis
Afterload
- Definition: Resistance the ventricle must overcome to eject blood
- Right ventricular afterload: Pulmonary Vascular Resistance (PVR) - normal: 100-250 dynes
- Left ventricular afterload: Systemic Vascular Resistance (SVR) - normal: 800-1200 dynes
- Increased afterload: Vasoconstriction, hypertension, aortic stenosis
- Decreased afterload: Vasodilation, sepsis, anaphylaxis
Pulmonary Artery Catheter Values
- RAP (Right Atrial Pressure): 2-6 mmHg - reflects right heart preload
- PA Systolic: 20-30 mmHg
- PA Diastolic: 8-15 mmHg
- PA Mean: 10-20 mmHg
- PAOP/Wedge: 8-12 mmHg - reflects left heart preload
- Mixed venous O2 saturation (SvO2): 60-80% - oxygen supply/demand balance
Acute Coronary Syndrome
ACS Overview
- Umbrella term for sudden reduction in coronary blood flow
- Spectrum: Unstable Angina β NSTEMI β STEMI
- Pathophysiology: Atherosclerotic plaque rupture β thrombus formation
- Key principle: "Time is muscle" - early reperfusion saves myocardium
Types of Angina
- Stable Angina: Predictable chest pain with exertion, relieved by rest/nitroglycerin
- Unstable Angina: New onset, worsening pattern, or occurs at rest - NO troponin elevation
- Variant/Prinzmetal Angina: Coronary vasospasm, ST elevation that resolves, often at rest
STEMI vs NSTEMI
- STEMI: Complete coronary occlusion, ST elevation on ECG, positive troponins
- NSTEMI: Partial occlusion, ST depression or T-wave inversion, positive troponins
- Troponin I normal: <0.04 ng/mL - elevated indicates myocardial injury
- ECG leads correlate to coronary territories (II, III, aVF = inferior/RCA)
ACS Treatment
- MONA: Morphine (if needed), Oxygen (if hypoxic), Nitro, Aspirin (325mg)
- Dual Antiplatelet Therapy: Aspirin + P2Y12 inhibitor (Plavix, Brilinta)
- Anticoagulation: Heparin, Enoxaparin, or Bivalirudin
- STEMI: PCI (door-to-balloon <90 min) or Fibrinolytics (door-to-needle <30 min)
- NSTEMI: Risk stratification, early invasive strategy for high-risk patients
- Post-PCI monitoring: Groin site bleeding, hematoma, retroperitoneal bleed signs
Cardiogenic Shock
Definition & Causes
- Heart fails as a pump - inadequate tissue perfusion
- Most common cause: Large MI (>40% LV involvement)
- Other causes: Cardiomyopathy, valvular dysfunction, arrhythmias, mechanical complications
- Mechanical complications: Papillary muscle rupture, VSD, free wall rupture
Hemodynamic Profile
- Decreased CO/CI (<2.2 L/min/mΒ²)
- Elevated PAOP (>18 mmHg)
- Elevated SVR (compensatory vasoconstriction)
- Hypotension: SBP <90 mmHg or MAP <65 mmHg
- Low SvO2 (<60%) indicating increased oxygen extraction
Clinical Presentation
- Cold, clammy skin (poor perfusion)
- Altered mental status
- Oliguria (<0.5 mL/kg/hr)
- Elevated lactate (tissue hypoperfusion)
- Pulmonary congestion (crackles, dyspnea)
Management
- Optimize oxygenation - may need mechanical ventilation
- Inotropes: Dobutamine (increases contractility, vasodilation)
- Vasopressors: Norepinephrine if severely hypotensive
- Avoid excessive fluids - already volume overloaded
- Mechanical support: IABP, Impella, LVAD, ECMO
- Treat underlying cause: Revascularization for MI
Shock Categories & Classification
Overview of Shock
- Definition: Inadequate tissue perfusion leading to cellular hypoxia
- Four main categories: Distributive, Cardiogenic, Hypovolemic, Obstructive
- Common endpoint: End-organ dysfunction from oxygen supply-demand mismatch
- Early recognition and treatment essential to prevent irreversible damage
Distributive Shock
- Characterized by widespread vasodilation and loss of vascular tone
- SEPTIC: Most common - caused by infection (Gram+, Gram-, fungal, viral)
- NEUROGENIC: Spinal cord injury disrupts sympathetic tone (bradycardia + hypotension)
- ANAPHYLACTIC: Severe allergic reaction causing massive histamine release
- Other causes: Liver failure, SIRS, toxic shock syndrome, transfusion reactions
- Hemodynamics: Low SVR, high CO (warm shock initially), elevated or normal PAOP
Cardiogenic Shock
- Primary pump failure - heart cannot maintain adequate cardiac output
- Cardiomyopathic causes: MI, RV infarct, heart failure exacerbation, myocarditis
- Drug-induced: Beta-blocker overdose, calcium channel blocker toxicity
- Stunned myocardium: Post-arrest, post-cardiopulmonary bypass
- Hemodynamics: Low CO/CI, elevated PAOP, elevated SVR
- Clinical: Cold extremities, pulmonary edema, oliguria
Hypovolemic Shock
- Inadequate circulating volume leading to decreased preload
- HEMORRHAGIC: Trauma, GI bleeding, surgical blood loss, retroperitoneal bleed
- NON-HEMORRHAGIC: Severe dehydration, vomiting/diarrhea, burns, third-spacing
- Hemodynamics: Low CO, low PAOP/CVP, elevated SVR (compensatory)
- Treatment: Volume resuscitation - crystalloids, blood products for hemorrhagic
- Massive transfusion protocol: 1:1:1 ratio PRBC:FFP:Platelets
Obstructive Shock
- Mechanical obstruction to blood flow impairs cardiac output
- PULMONARY VASCULAR: Massive PE, severe pulmonary hypertension, air embolism
- MECHANICAL: Tension pneumothorax, cardiac tamponade, constrictive pericarditis
- Key feature: JVD with hypotension (blood cannot enter or leave heart)
- Treatment: Relieve obstruction (needle decompression, pericardiocentesis, thrombolytics)
- Hemodynamics: Low CO, elevated CVP, variable SVR
Shock Differentiation by Hemodynamics
- Distributive: βSVR, βCO (early), normal/low PAOP
- Cardiogenic: βSVR, βCO, βPAOP
- Hypovolemic: βSVR, βCO, βPAOP
- Obstructive: Variable SVR, βCO, βCVP
- SvO2 <60% in all types indicates inadequate oxygen delivery
- Lactate elevation indicates tissue hypoperfusion regardless of type
Heart Failure
Types of Heart Failure
- Systolic HF (HFrEF): Reduced ejection fraction (<40%), impaired contractility
- Diastolic HF (HFpEF): Preserved EF (>50%), impaired relaxation/filling
- Left Heart Failure: Pulmonary congestion (dyspnea, crackles, orthopnea)
- Right Heart Failure: Systemic congestion (JVD, peripheral edema, hepatomegaly)
BNP - Brain Natriuretic Peptide
- Released by ventricles in response to stretch/volume overload
- BNP >100 pg/mL suggests heart failure
- NT-proBNP >300 pg/mL suggests heart failure
- Used to differentiate cardiac from pulmonary causes of dyspnea
RAAS System in Heart Failure
- Decreased renal perfusion triggers renin release
- Renin converts angiotensinogen to Angiotensin I
- ACE converts Ang I to Ang II (potent vasoconstrictor)
- Ang II stimulates aldosterone release (sodium/water retention)
- This creates a vicious cycle worsening heart failure
Heart Failure Treatment
- ACE Inhibitors/ARBs: Block RAAS, reduce afterload and remodeling
- Beta Blockers: Reduce heart rate, improve survival (start low, go slow)
- Diuretics: Reduce preload and congestion
- Aldosterone antagonists: Spironolactone - reduces mortality
- Digoxin: Increases contractility, controls rate in AFib
- Hydralazine/Nitrate: Alternative for ACE-intolerant patients
Cardiomyopathies
Dilated Cardiomyopathy
- Enlarged, weakened ventricles with poor systolic function
- Causes: Viral, alcoholic, peripartum, idiopathic
- Treatment: Standard HF therapy (ACE-I, BB, diuretics)
- Tako-Tsubo (Stress) Cardiomyopathy: Apical ballooning from catecholamine surge
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM/HOCM)
- Thickened ventricular walls, especially septum
- Diastolic dysfunction - stiff, non-compliant ventricle
- Can cause LVOT obstruction during systole
- Risk of sudden cardiac death, especially in young athletes
- AVOID: Inotropes, volume depletion, vasodilators (worsen obstruction)
- Treatment: Beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, ICD if high risk
Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
- Rigid, non-compliant ventricles from infiltrative disease
- Causes: Amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, hemochromatosis
- Impaired filling (diastolic dysfunction)
- Poor prognosis, treatment is supportive
Valvular Disorders & Heart Sounds
Heart Sounds
- S1: Closure of AV valves (mitral/tricuspid) - "Lub"
- S2: Closure of semilunar valves (aortic/pulmonic) - "Dub"
- S3: Early diastole, ventricular filling - suggests HF or volume overload
- S4: Late diastole, atrial kick against stiff ventricle - suggests hypertrophy
Stenosis vs Regurgitation
- Stenosis: Valve narrowing, restricted blood flow forward
- Regurgitation: Valve incompetence, backward blood flow
- Aortic Stenosis: Systolic crescendo-decrescendo murmur, syncope, angina, HF
- Aortic Regurgitation: Diastolic decrescendo murmur, widened pulse pressure
- Mitral Stenosis: Diastolic rumble, atrial fibrillation common
- Mitral Regurgitation: Systolic blowing murmur radiating to axilla
Endocarditis & Pericarditis
- Endocarditis: Infection of heart valves (vegetation formation)
- Risk factors: IV drug use, prosthetic valves, poor dentition
- Treatment: Prolonged IV antibiotics, possible valve surgery
- Pericarditis: Inflammation of pericardium
- Classic findings: Chest pain relieved by sitting forward, friction rub
- ECG: Diffuse ST elevation, PR depression
- Treatment: NSAIDs, colchicine, watch for tamponade
Vascular Emergencies
Aortic Aneurysm
- Permanent dilation of aorta (>50% normal diameter)
- Risk factors: Hypertension, atherosclerosis, connective tissue disorders
- Often asymptomatic until rupture or dissection
- Ruptured AAA: Severe back/abdominal pain, hypotension, pulsatile mass
- Treatment: Emergent surgical repair, BP control
Aortic Dissection
- Tear in intimal layer allows blood between vessel wall layers
- Type A: Involves ascending aorta - surgical emergency
- Type B: Descending aorta only - medical management possible
- Classic presentation: Tearing chest pain radiating to back
- BP differential between arms, widened mediastinum on CXR
- Management: BP control (SBP <120, HR <60), beta blockers first, then vasodilators
Peripheral Arterial Disease
- Arterial insufficiency: Acute (6 Ps) - Pain, Pallor, Pulselessness, Paresthesia, Paralysis, Poikilothermia
- Chronic arterial insufficiency: Claudication (cramping with walking)
- Venous insufficiency: Edema, skin changes, chronic, DVT risk
- Treatment: Revascularization for arterial, anticoagulation for venous
Hypertensive Crisis
- Hypertensive Urgency: Severely elevated BP without end-organ damage
- Hypertensive Emergency: Elevated BP WITH end-organ damage
- Target organs: Brain (stroke, encephalopathy), Heart (MI, HF), Kidneys, Eyes
- Treatment: IV antihypertensives (Nicardipine, Labetalol, Nitroprusside)
- Goal: Reduce MAP by 20-25% in first hour, avoid precipitous drop
- Nitroprusside: Watch for cyanide/thiocyanate toxicity
Malignant Hypertension
- DBP typically >140 mmHg with end-organ damage
- Classic findings: Papilledema, retinal hemorrhages
- Other manifestations: Encephalopathy, acute kidney injury, heart failure
- Requires ICU admission and continuous BP monitoring
- Treatment: Gradual BP reduction - rapid drops can cause stroke/ischemia
ACS & MI Detailed Management
Acute Coronary Syndrome Spectrum
- ACS = Sudden blockage of coronary blood flow from atherosclerosis/clots
- CRITICAL CONCEPT: "Time is Tissue" - early reperfusion = best outcomes
- Spectrum from least to most severe: Unstable Angina β NSTEMI β STEMI
- Troponin determines presence of myocardial necrosis
- EKG changes indicate extent and location of injury
π Angina Types Comparison
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- TYPE β PATTERN β TROPONIN β TREATMENT
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Stable Angina β Predictable with exertion β NEGATIVE β Rest, Nitroglycerin,
- β Relieved by rest β β Risk factor modification
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Unstable Angina β New onset, increasing β NEGATIVE β Anticoagulation, ASA,
- β severity, occurs at REST β β Risk stratification
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Variant β Vasospasm, often early β NEGATIVE β Calcium Channel Blockers,
- (Prinzmetal) β morning, at rest β β Nitrates. Avoid beta blockers
- β Triggers: stress, cold, β β (can worsen spasm)
- β tobacco, cocaine β β
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
π NSTEMI vs STEMI Comparison
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- FEATURE β NSTEMI β STEMI
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Vessel β PARTIAL occlusion β COMPLETE occlusion
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- EKG β ST DEPRESSION or β ST ELEVATION >1mm limb leads
- β T-wave inversion β or >2mm precordial leads
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Troponin β ELEVATED (>0.4 mcg/L) β ELEVATED
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Management β Heparin drip, monitoring, β EMERGENT reperfusion:
- β ischemia-guided strategy β PCI goal <90 min OR
- β β Fibrinolytics <30 min
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
STEMI Reperfusion Goals
- βββ DOOR-TO-TREATMENT TIMES βββ
- PCI (Cath Lab): Door-to-balloon <90 minutes
- Fibrinolytics: Door-to-needle <30 minutes
- Transfer for PCI: Door-in-door-out <30 minutes if no on-site cath lab
- SYMPTOMS: Dyspnea, diaphoresis, chest pain NOT relieved by nitroglycerin
- PATHOLOGIC Q WAVE: Width >40ms OR depth >25% of R wave = indicates INFARCTION/NECROSIS
Nitroglycerin Precautions
- Vasodilator that reduces preload and myocardial oxygen consumption
- β οΈ CAUTION with INFERIOR MI (Leads II, III, aVF):
- β’ Often involves RIGHT VENTRICLE (RCA territory)
- β’ RV is preload-dependent
- β’ Nitroglycerin reduces preload β can cause severe hypotension
- β’ Always check RIGHT-SIDED LEADS (V4R) before giving nitrates
- β οΈ CONTRAINDICATED with PDE-5 inhibitors (Sildenafil/Viagra)
- β’ Can cause dangerous hypotension
- β οΈ OXYGEN: Only supplement if SpO2 <94% or respiratory distress
- β’ Excessive O2 can cause peripheral vasoconstriction
Post-PCI Nursing Care
- CHECK PEDAL PULSES: Ensures no arterial occlusion from procedure
- MONITOR RENAL FUNCTION: Contrast dye can cause nephropathy
- β’ Watch for rising creatinine, decreased urine output
- β’ Ensure adequate hydration
- INSERTION SITE MONITORING:
- β’ Hematoma formation
- β’ Active bleeding
- β’ RETROPERITONEAL BLEEDING: Flank pain + hypotension = emergency
- MEDICATIONS: Continue dual antiplatelet therapy (Aspirin + P2Y12 inhibitor)
Papillary Muscle Rupture
- LOCATION: Most commonly after INFERIOR or LATERAL MI
- β’ Posteromedial papillary muscle has SINGLE blood supply (RCA)
- β’ Anterolateral has dual supply (less commonly ruptures)
- TIMING: Typically 2-7 days POST-MI
- CLINICAL SIGNS:
- β’ Acute LOUD SYSTOLIC MURMUR (mitral regurgitation)
- β’ Sudden pulmonary edema
- β’ Cardiogenic shock
- HEMODYNAMIC FINDING: Large "V" wave on PAOP tracing
- TREATMENT: Emergent surgical repair, may need IABP for stabilization
Peripheral Vascular Disorders
Carotid Artery Stenosis
- CAUSE: Atherosclerosis at carotid bifurcation reduces cerebral blood flow
- IMPACT: Accounts for 15-25% of all strokes
- ASSESSMENT:
- β’ Carotid BRUIT or THRILL on auscultation
- β’ Symptoms: Visual changes, syncope, TIA symptoms
- INTERVENTION: Endarterectomy or stenting if occlusion >70%
Post-Carotid Endarterectomy Nursing
- AIRWAY MONITORING: Watch for stridor, edema (surgical site near airway)
- CRANIAL NERVE ASSESSMENT:
- β’ CN IX (Glossopharyngeal): Swallowing difficulty
- β’ CN X (Vagus): Hoarseness, vocal changes
- β’ CN XII (Hypoglossal): Tongue deviation
- BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL: Maintain <160 mmHg to prevent bleeding
- NEUROLOGICAL CHECKS: Frequent assessment for stroke signs
π Arterial vs Venous Insufficiency
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- FEATURE β ARTERIAL β VENOUS
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Pain Character β Claudication (cramping β Crampy, aching pain
- β with walking), rest pain β
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Temperature β COOL (poikilothermia) β WARM
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Skin Changes β Pale, shiny, hairless β Brown pigmentation at
- β β ankles, stasis dermatitis
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Edema β Minimal or absent β SIGNIFICANT edema
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Pulses β DIMINISHED or ABSENT β Present
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
Acute Arterial Occlusion - The 6 Ps
- βββ CRITICAL LIMB ISCHEMIA SIGNS βββ
- 1. PAIN - Severe, sudden onset
- 2. PALLOR - Pale, waxy appearance
- 3. PULSELESSNESS - No distal pulses
- 4. PARESTHESIA - Numbness, tingling
- 5. PARALYSIS - Cannot move extremity (late sign)
- 6. POIKILOTHERMIA - Cold (unable to regulate temperature)
- TREATMENT:
- β’ Bypass grafting for larger vessels
- β’ Fibrinolysis for smaller vessels
- β’ Fasciotomy if compartment syndrome develops
- THIS IS A SURGICAL EMERGENCY - "Time is muscle"
Venous Insufficiency & DVT
- SYMPTOMS: Crampy pain, warm extremities, edema, brown ankle pigmentation
- DVT RISK FACTORS: Virchow triad - Stasis, Endothelial injury, Hypercoagulability
- PREVENTION: Ambulation, anticoagulation, SCDs
- β οΈ WARNING: Do NOT use compression sleeves on existing DVT (risk of embolization)
- TREATMENT: Anticoagulation, elevation, eventually compression after acute phase
Structural Heart Disease & Emergencies
Cardiac Tamponade Detailed
- Fluid accumulation in pericardial space compresses heart
- βββ BECK'S TRIAD βββ
- 1. JVD (Jugular Venous Distension)
- 2. Hypotension
- 3. Muffled/distant heart sounds
- PULSUS PARADOXUS: SBP drop >10 mmHg during inspiration
- β’ Inspiration increases venous return to right heart
- β’ Compressed heart cannot accommodate β LV filling decreases
- β’ Stroke volume and BP drop during inspiration
- TREATMENT: Pericardiocentesis (emergent fluid removal)
Endocarditis
- Bacterial infection causing vegetation on heart valves
- USUALLY AFFECTS LEFT-SIDED VALVES (mitral, aortic)
- RISK FACTORS: IV drug use, prosthetic valves, dental procedures
- CLASSIC SIGNS:
- β’ Petechiae (skin, conjunctivae)
- β’ Splinter hemorrhages (nail beds)
- β’ Osler nodes (painful, fingers/toes)
- β’ Janeway lesions (painless, palms/soles)
- DIAGNOSIS: Duke criteria, blood cultures, echocardiogram
- TREATMENT: Prolonged IV antibiotics (4-6 weeks), may need valve surgery
Pericarditis
- Inflammation of the pericardial sac
- CLASSIC SYMPTOMS:
- β’ Sharp chest pain RELIEVED by sitting up and leaning forward
- β’ Worsened by lying flat, deep breathing
- β’ Pericardial friction rub on auscultation
- EKG FINDINGS: DIFFUSE ST elevation (not confined to coronary territory)
- CAUSES: Viral (most common), post-MI (Dressler syndrome), uremia, autoimmune
- TREATMENT: NSAIDs, Colchicine
- β οΈ WATCH FOR: Progression to tamponade (worsening symptoms, Beck's triad)
π Aortic Dissection vs Rupture
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- FEATURE β DISSECTION β RUPTURE
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Pathology β Tear between arterial β Complete perforation
- β layers (false lumen) β of vessel wall
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Presentation β Sudden severe chest pain, β Sudden severe pain,
- β "tearing" quality, β PROFOUND HYPOTENSION,
- β radiating to back β Shock, syncope
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Blood Pressure β May be hypertensive β HYPOTENSIVE (bleeding out)
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- Priority β BP CONTROL critical β RAPID TRANSFUSION,
- Treatment β (Nipride, Beta-blockers) β Emergent surgery
- βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
- β οΈ NIPRIDE TOXICITY: Watch for thiocyanate toxicity with prolonged use
Cardiac Cycle Dynamics
Understanding the Cardiac Cycle
- One complete heartbeat from beginning of one contraction to the next
- Composed of systole (contraction/ejection) and diastole (relaxation/filling)
- Duration varies inversely with heart rate
- At 60 bpm: cycle lasts 1 second (systole 30%, diastole 70%)
- At 120 bpm: cycle lasts 0.5 seconds (systole 60%, diastole 40%)
Systole and Diastole Proportions
- At rest (60 bpm): Diastole dominates at 70% - optimal filling time
- At 90 bpm: Diastole reduced to 55% of cycle
- At 120 bpm: Diastole only 40% - filling time significantly reduced
- Higher HR = proportionally more time in systole, less in diastole
- Tachycardia compromises ventricular filling time
Clinical Significance for Critical Care
- Shortened diastole decreases coronary perfusion (occurs during diastole)
- Rapid heart rates can compromise preload and stroke volume
- Patients with diastolic dysfunction are sensitive to rate increases
- Heart rate control crucial in ischemia and heart failure
- Beta blockers extend diastole, improving filling and coronary flow
Phases of Ventricular Systole
- Isovolumetric contraction: Ventricles contract, all valves closed
- Rapid ejection: Aortic/pulmonic valves open, blood ejected rapidly
- Reduced ejection: Flow slows as pressure equalizes
- About 2/3 of stroke volume ejected in first 1/3 of systole
Phases of Ventricular Diastole
- Isovolumetric relaxation: Ventricles relax, all valves closed
- Rapid filling: AV valves open, blood rushes into ventricles
- Diastasis: Slow passive filling from atria
- Atrial contraction (atrial kick): Contributes 15-25% of ventricular filling
- Loss of atrial kick (AFib) reduces cardiac output by 15-25%
Cardiac Waveforms & Hemodynamic Monitoring
ECG and Arterial Waveform Correlation
- ECG represents electrical activity; arterial waveform represents mechanical output
- QRS complex triggers ventricular contraction β systolic upstroke
- T wave corresponds with ventricular repolarization β diastolic phase
- Time delay between electrical and mechanical events is normal
- Arrhythmias visible on ECG will affect arterial waveform
Arterial Waveform Components
- Systolic upstroke: Rapid rise as ventricle ejects blood
- Systolic peak: Maximum arterial pressure
- Dicrotic notch: Represents aortic valve closure
- Diastolic runoff: Gradual decline as blood flows to periphery
- Diastolic pressure: Lowest point before next systole
Central Venous Pressure (CVP) Waveform
- A wave: Atrial contraction (absent in AFib)
- C wave: Tricuspid valve bulging during isovolumetric contraction
- X descent: Atrial relaxation and downward movement of tricuspid valve
- V wave: Atrial filling against closed tricuspid valve
- Y descent: Tricuspid valve opens, blood flows into ventricle
Pulmonary Artery Waveform
- Similar to arterial waveform but at lower pressures
- Normal PA systolic: 20-30 mmHg
- Normal PA diastolic: 8-15 mmHg
- Elevated PA pressures suggest pulmonary hypertension or left heart failure
- PAWP obtained by inflating balloon and measuring "wedge" pressure
Waveform Troubleshooting
- Dampened waveform: Air in line, clot, kinked catheter, hypotension
- Overdamped: Loss of dicrotic notch, falsely low systolic
- Underdamped: Exaggerated oscillations, falsely high systolic
- Catheter whip: Excessive movement creating artifact
- Square wave test: Used to assess dynamic response of system
See a Cardiovascular question you canβt answer?
Here are 3 questions from our premium bank. The full rationale explains exactly why the right answer is right β and why the 3 distractors trap most test-takers.
A 71-year-old arrives with dyspnea and chest pressure. Skin is cool and clammy. VS: HR 118, BP 78/44, SpOβ 92% on 4 L NC. Crackles present bilaterally. Hemodynamics: CI 1.7, CVP 18, PAOP 24, SVR 1750, SvOβ 54%. Which shock type best fits?
- Hypovolemic
- Distributive (early septic)
- Cardiogenic
- Neurogenic
A patient on an IABP reports worsening chest pain. The arterial waveform shows balloon deflation occurring after the next systolic upstroke begins, and assisted systolic pressure appears higher than expected. What is the most likely problem/effect?
- Early inflation β decreased coronary perfusion
- Late inflation β decreased diastolic augmentation
- Late deflation β increased afterload and myocardial oxygen demand
- Early deflation β improved unloading
A 63-year-old is 24 hours postβinferior MI. Suddenly develops acute respiratory distress, frothy sputum, hypotension, and a new loud holosystolic murmur at the apex. SpOβ 84% on NRB. What is the most likely cause?
- Acute pericarditis
- Papillary muscle rupture β acute severe mitral regurgitation
- Right ventricular infarct causing preload collapse
- Dressler syndrome
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