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Valvular Heart Diseases

Valvular Heart Diseases

Valvular Heart Diseases

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Valvular Disease Overview - Valve Vibes Intro

  • Valvular Heart Disease (VHD): Dysfunction of heart valves (mitral, aortic, tricuspid, pulmonary), impairing blood flow.
  • Primary Lesions:
    • Stenosis: Valve narrowing → restricted flow → pressure overload.
    • Regurgitation (Insufficiency): Incomplete closure → backward flow → volume overload.
  • Common Etiologies:
    • Rheumatic Heart Disease (RHD): Major cause, especially in India.
    • Degenerative: Calcification (aortic stenosis), myxomatous (MVP).
    • Infective Endocarditis.
    • Congenital (e.g., bicuspid aortic valve).
  • Consequences: ↑ Cardiac workload → chamber hypertrophy/dilation → potential heart failure.

Normal vs. Diseased Heart Valves

⭐ Rheumatic fever most commonly affects the mitral valve; mitral stenosis is the most frequent chronic rheumatic valvular lesion.

Mitral Valve Pathologies - Floppy & Tight

Mitral Stenosis (MS) - "Tight"

  • Etiology: Rheumatic heart disease (RHD).
  • Pathophys: ↓MVA → ↑LA pressure → Pulm. HTN.
  • Clinical: Dyspnea, hemoptysis. Loud S1, Opening Snap (OS), mid-diastolic rumble (apex).
  • Echo: MVA < 1.5 cm² (severe < 1.0 cm²); "Hockey-stick" leaflet.
  • Rx: Medical (diuretics, β-blockers, OAC for AF). PTMC/MVR for severe/symptomatic.

Mitral Regurgitation (MR) - "Floppy"

  • Etiology: MVP, RHD, ischemic, IE.
  • Pathophys: LV volume overload → LV dilation/dysfunction.
  • Clinical: Dyspnea, fatigue. Holosystolic murmur (apex → axilla).
  • Echo: Regurgitant jet. Surgery if EF < 60% or LVESD > 40 mm.
  • Rx: Medical (vasodilators). Surgery (repair > replacement) if symptomatic or LV dysfunction.

⭐ In MS, severity is primarily assessed by MVA; pressure gradient is flow-dependent and can be misleading.

Echocardiogram of mitral stenosis

Aortic Valve Pathologies - Narrow & Leaky

Aortic Stenosis (AS) - "Narrow"

  • Etiology: Calcific (>70y), Bicuspid AV (<70y).
  • Symptoms: 📌 SAD Triad: Syncope, Angina, Dyspnea.
  • Murmur: Systolic ejection (crescendo-decrescendo), radiates to carotids. Soft S2.
  • Severe AS (Echo): AVA <1.0 cm², Mean Gradient >40 mmHg, Jet Velocity >4 m/s.
  • Treatment: Valve replacement (SAVR/TAVR) for symptomatic severe AS, LVEF <50%, or if very severe AS.

Aortic Regurgitation (AR) - "Leaky"

  • Etiology: Acute (IE, dissection), Chronic (valve dz, root dilation e.g., Marfan).
  • Symptoms: Dyspnea, palpitations. Wide pulse pressure.
  • Murmur: Early diastolic decrescendo. Austin Flint murmur.
  • Signs: Water-hammer pulse.
  • Treatment: SAVR for symptomatic severe AR, or if LVEF ≤55% / LVESD >50mm.

⭐ In severe AR, surgery is indicated even in asymptomatic patients if LV End Systolic Dimension (LVESD) > 50 mm or LVEF ≤ 55%.

Aortic Stenosis: Pressure vs Time & Heart Sounds

Other VHD & Prosthetics - Right Side & Fixes

  • Tricuspid Regurgitation (TR): Functional (RV failure). Holosystolic murmur, LLSB, ↑ inspiration (Carvallo's sign 📌). RHF signs.
  • Tricuspid Stenosis (TS): Rheumatic. Diastolic murmur, LLSB, opening snap.
  • Pulmonary Stenosis (PS): Congenital. Systolic ejection murmur, ULSB, click.
  • Pulmonary Regurgitation (PR): From pulm HTN (Graham Steell murmur).
  • Prosthetic Valves (PHV):
    • Mechanical: Durable. Lifelong anticoagulation (INR: Mitral 2.5-3.5, Aortic 2.0-3.0).
    • Bioprosthetic: Less durable. Anticoagulation ~3 months.
    • Risks: Thrombosis, endocarditis, failure. Mechanical vs Bioprosthetic Valve Survival (Ages 50-59)
  • IE Prophylaxis (High-Risk VHD): Dental, respiratory, infected tissue procedures.
    • Amoxicillin 2g PO.

    ⭐ Early Prosthetic Valve Endocarditis (<1 year post-op) often involves S. epidermidis; Late PVE resembles native valve IE.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Rheumatic fever is the leading cause of mitral stenosis (MS).
  • MS classically presents with a low-pitched, mid-diastolic murmur at the apex.
  • Aortic stenosis triad: SAD (Syncope, Angina, Dyspnea on exertion).
  • AS features a harsh crescendo-decrescendo systolic ejection murmur radiating to carotids.
  • Severe aortic regurgitation can cause an Austin Flint murmur.
  • AR signs include water hammer pulse and Corrigan's sign.
  • Mitral valve prolapse is characterized by a mid-systolic click.

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