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CARDIAC MISCELLANY FOR INTERNAL MEDICINE Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Sep 17, 2015
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Cardiology on the medicine boards 2015 Cardiology14% Hypertension5% Pericardial disease<2% Ischemic heart disease<2% Dysrhythmias/conduction defects<2% Congenital heart disease<2% Valvular heart disease<2% Myocardial disease<2% Cardiac tumors<2% Endocarditis<2% Vascular disease<2% Syncope<2% Preoperative evaluation<2% Lipid disorders<2% Antithrombotic therapy<2% Other cardiovascular disease<2%
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Few notes Be familiar with ECG BBB, AF, AFL CXR CAD/ACS Normal PAC (numbers/waves) Sounds added 2013 Systolic vs diastolic murmur Fixed splitting Know HTN cold Not trying to trick you Generally conservative (less testing, cheaper, etc.)
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Question 1 59yoM with no known medical history presents with chest pressure and shortness of breath. 6 days ago, he had chest pressure with shortness of breath with exertion that lasted for an hour or two then went away. 3 days ago, he had intense severe chest pressure; later, he had shortness of breath. Over the course of the next few days until presentation, the chest pressure eventually lessened, and the shortness of breath grew worse “all of a sudden” today.
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Question 1 Exam: T 38.8 HR 105 BP 89/55 RR 24 O2 sat 88% NRB Tachycardic, 1/6 holosystolic murmur at apex, Mild JVD with no LE edema Inspiratory crackles, R>L Labs: WBC 15, Hgb 8.8, Plt 170 Tn 1.05 ECG and CXR are available for review
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Question 1
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Which is the best next step in management? A) Intravenous antibiotics B) Intravenous diuretic C) Intravenous inotropic support D) Urgent cardiac catheterization E) Consult cardiology
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Question 1b Which vessel do you expect to be the culprit? A) Left main B) LAD C) LCX D) RCA
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Question 1c Which mechanical complication is this patient most at risk for? A) Papillary muscle rupture B) Ventricular septal defect C) Left ventricular free wall rupture
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Word association Mechanical complications of MI Pump failure—LAD (supplies ~60% of myo) VSD—LAD Rupture—LCX (esp 1 st MI, women, no other disease) MR/pap rupture—RCA Avoid DOB RV infarct—RCA Avoid NTG, give fluids Takes time for muscle to rot (typically 2-3d)
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Question 2 60yoF with breast cancer undergoes pulmonary artery catheterization to evaluate shortness of breath. Her pressures and oxygen saturation are below: LocationPressure% O2 RA2074 RV36/2073 PA36/2073 PCWP2090
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Question 2 20
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Question 2 What is the next best step in management? A) Emergent pericardiocentesis B) Initiation of PDE C) Inhaled bronchodilators D) Emergent cardiac surgery
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Question 2b 60yoF with diabetes undergoes pulmonary artery catheterization to evaluate shortness of breath of acute onset lasting for the past 3 days. Her pressures are oxygen saturation are below: LocationPressure% O2 RA2074 RV52/2084 PA52/3084 PCWP1595
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Question 2b What is the next best step in management? A) Emergent pericardiocentesis B) Initiation of PDE C) Inhaled bronchodilators D) Emergent cardiac surgery
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PAC “Rule of 6s” for normal pressures RA ≤6 RV 36/6 PA 36/12 PCWP 12 Venous waveforms A—atrial kick C—valve closure (pressure wave reflects back into atrium) V—passive filling of atrium Watch for “step-ups” in O2 sat (indicates L R shunt)
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PAC
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Other pericardial things Tamponade cancer Lung, breast, lymphoma Restrictive (JVD+clear lungs) Usually radiation (pericardial disease) Think also of amyloid, HHC, infiltrative disease Constrictive heart disease Post-CT surgery Inflammatory disease TB Kussmaul’s sign Pericarditis Know ECG Colchicine+NSAIDS (not steroids)
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Question 3 35yoM presents for evaluation of shortness of breath. He has been taking inhaled bronchodilators per advice of previous PCP without effect. Exam T 36.3 HR 98 BP 112/65 RR 16 94% RA RRR, no g/r/m, fixed splitting of second heart sound CTAB
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Question 3 Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis? A) ASD B) VSD C) PFO D) Pulmonary hypertension
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Question 4 63yoF with a history of alcoholism is found down. On EMS arrival, she became unstable and received ACLS protocol. Upon resuscitation, her ECG is as shown.
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Question 4
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What is the most likely diagnosis? A) Alcoholic cardiomyopathy B) Acute coronary syndrome C) Hypokalemia D) Hypocalcemia E) Hyponatremia
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Question 4b What rhythm is most likely the cause of her cardiac arrest? A) Asystole B) PEA C) VT D) VF
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Question 5 25yoM with a history of severe asthma requiring intubation presents with palpitations. A) ST-elevation MI B) SVT C) VT D) AF E) AFL
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Question 5
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Question 5b What is the next best step in management? A) Adenosine B) Verapamil C) DCCV D) Reassurance
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Question 5
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AVNRTBaseline
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Question 6 72yoF presents with palpitations. A) ST-elevation MI B) SVT C) VT D) AF E) AFL
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Question 6
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Ashman’s Phenomenon
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Question 7 75yoM h/o CAD and HF presents with palpitations. A) ST-elevation MI B) SVT C) VT D) AF E) AFL
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Question 8—Systolic Murmurs 1) Increase w/ resp 2) Increase w/ HG 3) Decrease w/ HG 4) Late-peaking A) HOCM B) MR C) AS (severe) D) TR
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Question 9—Diastolic Murmurs 1) Rheumatic 2) Continuous/machine 3) Endocarditis A) AR B) MS C) PDA
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