ADULT ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY Lesson Nine Valvular Heart Disease Harry H. Holdorf PhD, MPA, RDMS, RVT, LRT,...

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Transcript of ADULT ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY Lesson Nine Valvular Heart Disease Harry H. Holdorf PhD, MPA, RDMS, RVT, LRT,...

ADULT ECHOCARDIOGRAPHYLesson Nine

Valvular Heart DiseaseHarry H. Holdorf PhD, MPA, RDMS, RVT, LRT, N.P.

Aortic Regurgitation

• Etiology– Primary cusp disease

(stenosis, endocarditis, ankylosing spondylitis)

– Dilated aortic annulus and root (Marfan, aortitis, HTN, aneurysm)

– Los of commissural support (trauma, aortic dissection, membranous VSD)

– Prosthetic valve dysfunction

Aortic dissection & Flap in descending AO

• NOTES:– Which anomaly goes with

aortic dissection?• Marfan Syndrome

– If you have a uniformly dilated aortic root, which term best describes this?• Fusiform

Sinus of Valsalva Aneurysm

• Pathophysiology– Left ventricular volume

overload leads to LV dilatation– Decreased ejection fraction

with long standing regurgitation– Increased risk of endocarditis

• Physical Signs• Bounding (bifid (bisferious)

atrial pulse• High-pitched diastolic

“blowing” murmur left sternal border (LSB)

• Symptoms of CHF, DOE, angina, and or syncope.

• Wide pulse pressure (big difference between systolic and diastolic numbers during BP readings.

• NOTES– Which is the most

common chamber for a sinus of Valsalva aneurysm to rupture into?• Right atrium

– What kind of murmur would you hear in a patient with a rupture of a sinus of Valsalva aneurysm?• Continuous

– Know diastolic “blow” (the classic aortic regurgitation murmur)

Ao Regurg

Echo– M-mode may show

diastolic fluttering of the mitral valve leaflets (mostly anterior) or interventricular septum

– Mitral valve “pre-closure” with severe acute AR

– Diastolic fluttering or lack of closure of he aortic leaflets

– Decreased excursion of the anterior MV leaflet

– LV dilatation with increased LV mass

• Aortic valve or root abnormalities may be present

• Pre-systolic opening of the aortic leaflets

• LV contractility may be hyper or hypo-dynamic (acute vs. chronic)

• TEE best for diagnosing aortic dissections

• Chronic AR patients should have serial echoes to follow changes in diastolic and systolic size.

M-mode of Diastolic MV Fluttering

M-mode of Premature MV closure

• NOTE: What causes MV pre-closure?– An elevated LVEDP

The line in the QRS: MV pre-closure should be in the middle.

Normal MV closure is in the middle to the end of the QRS complex

• Doppler– Diastolic turbulence in the

LVOT– Diastolic flow reversal in

the descending Ao (Mod to Sev AR)

– Obtain the end diastolic gradient from CW Doppler to estimate the LVEDP (diastolic BP – end diastolic gradient

– Map the regurgitant area with pulsed or color flow Doppler

– Try to determine the regurgitant area in LAX and SAX to estimate severity

• NOTE: Know Color Doppler M-Mode of aortic insufficiency

• JH/LVOT (ratio)– Mild = <25%– Mod = 25-65%– Sev = >65%– JH (Jet height)

– Ao P ½ time• Mild = > 500 msec• Mod = 500-200 msec• Sev = <200 msec

Ao P ½ time

• Homework: show images demonstrating aortic pressure half-time

• B is more severe because Ao & LV pressures are equal at end diastole.

• LVEDP = diastolic BP – end diastolic gradient– Ex. Patient w/ BP of

120/50 and end diastolic velocity of 2 m/sec

– LVEDP = 50-16 (converting the 2 m/sec using 4V2

= 34 mmHg

AI diastolic flow reversal –Descending Ao

• NOTE:– Know descending aorta

diastolic flow reversal (also called retrograde)

– Antegrade = normal flow direction

– Retrograde = flow in opposite direction

NOTE: Mild aortic regurgitation has an incomplete spectral trace

Moderate Ao regurgitation incomplete spectral trace

Pulmonary Regurgitation

• NOTE: Flick your bick– Candle flame is normal

regurgitation

EtiologyPrimary valve disease (stenosis, endocarditis)Pulmonary hypertensionCarcinoid heart diseaseTrivial/mild regurgitation is common.

• PATHOPHYSIOLOGY– RV volume overload may lead

to RV dilatation.– Severe regurgitation may cause

right heart failure– Evan moderate regurgitation

will be well tolerated for years– Increased risk for endocarditis

• Physical signs– Low-pitched diastolic murmur

(LSB) may increase with inspiration

– With pulmonary hypertension a high-pitched blowing diastolic murmur (Graham-Steele) may be heard (LSB)

• ECHO– RV dilatation with

displacement of LV septum posteriorly.

– Tricuspid valve fluttering is rare

• Doppler– Diastolic turbulence in the

RVOT– Map the regurgitant area

with pulsed or color flow Doppler

– Severe PI spectral trace is NOT holodiastolic

Severe PI

Calculating PA End Diastolic Pressure

• NOTE:– How would you calculate

pulmonary artery end diastolic pressure?• Pulmonic insufficiency

velocity– Know how to calculate

PAEDP when given a Right Atrial Pressure (RAP) of 10 mmHg and from the PI spectral trace an End Diastolic velocity (EDV) of 1.5 m/sec.

• PAEDP– RAP + EDP (end diastolic

pressure) converted from the DEV

10 +4 (1.5) sq.10 +4 (2.25)10 +9 = 19 mmHg

Tricuspid Regurgitation

• Etiology– Primary valve

abnormalities (rheumatic, prolapse, endocarditis, carcinoid)

– Elevated pulmonary pressure

– Annular dilatation/calcification

– Congenital valve abnormalities (Ebstein’s)

– Prosthetic valve dysfunction

– Trivial/mild TR is common

• Pathophysiology– Right atrial volume overload

lends to right atrial dilatation– Increased risk for endocarditis

• Physical signs– Holosystolic murmur which

increases with inspiration may be present

– Jugular venous distension– Symptoms of right heart failure

• Echo– Valvular abnormalities may be

seen– Right atrial dilatation– RV dilatation with displacement

of LV septum posteriorly– Dilatation of IVC– Contrast: systolic appearance

of bubbles in IVC

Dilated RV & IVC

Carcinoid Heart Disease-Fixed leaflets

• NOTE:– What is the most common

valvular abnormality associated with carcinoid syndrome?• Tricuspid regurgitation

NEXT: PROSTHETIC VALVES

End lesson Nine