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Essential Revision Notes for MRCP Third Edition - PasTest

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<strong>Essential</strong><strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong><strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong><strong>Third</strong> <strong>Edition</strong>


ContentsContributors to<strong>Third</strong> <strong>Edition</strong>Contributors to Second <strong>Edition</strong>Preface to the<strong>Third</strong> <strong>Edition</strong>viiixxiCHAPTER1. Cardiology 1J Paisey2. Clinical Pharmacology,Toxicology and Poisoning 53S Waring3. Dermatology 73H Robertshaw4. Endocrinology 91C Dayan5. Epidemiology 125G Whitlock6. Gastroenterology 139J Ramesh7. Genetics 179E Burkitt Wright8. Genito-urinary Medicine and AIDS 197B Goorney9. Haematology 211K Patterson10. Immunology 249M J McMahon11. Infectious Diseases andTropical Medicine 265C van Halsema12. Maternal Medicine 291L Byrd13. Metabolic Diseases 317Smeeta Sinhav


Contents14. Molecular Medicine 353K Siddals15. Nephrology 389P Kalra16. Neurology 447G Rees17. Ophthalmology 483K Smyth18. Psychiatry 501E Sampson19. Respiratory Medicine 527D Wales20. Rheumatology 569M J McMahon21. Statistics 593A WadeIndex 607vi


Chapter 1CardiologyCONTENTS1.1 Clinical examination1.1.1 Jugular venous pulse (JVP)1.1.2 Arterial pulse associations1.1.3 Cardiac apex1.1.4 Heart sounds1.2 Cardiac investigations1.2.1 Electrocardiography (ECG)1.2.2 Echocardiography1.2.3 Nuclear cardiology: myocardialperfusion imaging (MPI)1.2.4 Cardiac catheterisation1.2.5 Exercise stress testing1.2.6 24-hour ambulatory bloodpressure monitoring1.2.7 Computed tomography (CT)1.2.8 Magnetic resonance imaging(MRI)1.3 Valvular disease andendocarditis1.3.1 Murmurs1.3.2 Mitral stenosis1.3.3 Mitral regurgitation (MR)1.3.4 Aortic regurgitation (AR)1.3.5 Aortic stenosis (AS)1.3.6 Tricuspid regurgitation (TR)1.3.7 Prosthetic valves1.3.8 Infective endocarditis1.4 Congenital heart disease1.4.1 Atrial septal defect (ASD)1.4.2 Ventricular septal defect (VSD)1.4.3 Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)1.4.4 Coarctation of the aorta1.4.5 Eisenmenger syndrome1.4.6 Tetralogy of Fallot1.4.7 Important post-surgicalcirculation1.5 Arrhythmias and pacing1.5.1 Bradyarrhythmias1.5.2 Supraventricular tachycardias1.5.3 Atrial arrhythmias1.5.4 Ventricular arrhythmias andchannelopathies1.5.5 Pacing and ablation procedures1.6 Ischaemic heart disease1.6.1 Angina1.6.2 Myocardial infarction1.6.3 Medical therapy <strong>for</strong> myocardialinfarction1.6.4 Coronary artery interventionalprocedures1


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>1.7 Other myocardial diseases1.7.1 Cardiac failure1.7.2 Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy(HCM)1.7.3 Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM)1.7.4 Restrictive cardiomyopathy1.7.5 Myocarditis1.7.6 Cardiac tumours1.7.7 Alcohol and the heart1.7.8 Cardiac transplantation1.8 Pericardial disease1.8.1 Constrictive pericarditis1.8.2 Pericardial effusion1.8.3 Cardiac tamponade1.9 Disorders of major vessels1.9.1 Pulmonary hypertension1.9.2 Venous thrombosis andpulmonary embolism1.9.3 Systemic hypertension1.9.4 Aortic dissectionAppendix INormal cardiac physiological valuesAppendix IISummary of further trials in cardiology2


CardiologyCardiology1.1 CLINICAL EXAMINATION1.1.1 Jugular venous pulse (JVP)This reflects the right atrial pressure (normal to 3 cmabove the clavicle with the subject at 458). Thisshould fall with inspiration, which increases venousreturn by a suction effect of the lungs, and withexpansion of the pulmonary beds. However, if theneck veins are distended by inspiration this impliesthat the right heart chambers cannot increase in sizedue to restriction by fluid or pericardium: Kussmaul’ssign. Non-pulsatile JVP elevation occurs withsuperior vena caval obstruction.Normal waves in the JVPa waveDue to atrial contraction – active push up superiorvena cava (SVC) and into the right ventricle (maycause an audible S4).c waveAn invisible flicker in the x descent due to closureof the tricuspid valve, be<strong>for</strong>e the start of ventricularsystole.x descentDownward movement of the heart causes atrialstretch and a drop in pressure.v waveDue to passive filling of blood into the atriumagainst a closed tricuspid valve.y descentOpening of the tricuspid valve with passive movementof blood from the right atrium to the rightventricle (causing an S3 when audible).Pathological waves in the JVPa wavesLost in atrial fibrillation, giant in tricuspid stenosisor in pulmonary hypertension with sinus rhythm(atrial septal defect (ASD) will exaggerate the naturala and v waves in sinus rhythm).Giant v(s) wavesMerging of the a and v waves into a large wave(with a rapid y descent) as pressure continues toincrease due to ventricular systole in patients withtricuspid regurgitation.Steep x descentsOccur in states where there is atrial filling only dueto ventricular systole and downward movement ofthe base of the heart, ie compressed atrial stateswith tamponade or constrictive pericarditis.Rapid y descentOccurs in states where high flow occurs with tricuspidvalve opening (eg tricuspid regurgitation (highatrial load) or constrictive pericarditis) – vacuumeffect. A slow y descent indicates tricuspid stenosis.Cannon a wavesAtrial contractions against a closed tricuspid valvedue to a nodal rhythm, a ventricular tachycardia,ventricular-paced rhythm (regular), complete heartblock or ventricular extrasystoles (irregular). Theyoccur regularly but not consistently in type 1second-degree heart block.1.1.2 Arterial pulse associations• Collapsing: aortic regurgitation, arteriovenousfistula, patent ductus arteriosus or other largeextra-cardiac shunt• Slow rising: aortic stenosis (delayed percussionwave)• Bisferiens: a double shudder due to mixedaortic valve disease with significantregurgitation (tidal wave second impulse)• Jerky: hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy• Alternans: severe left ventricular failure3


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>• Paradoxical (pulsus paradoxus): an excessivereduction in the pulse with inspiration (drop insystolic BP .10 mmHg) occurs with leftventricular compression, tamponade,constrictive pericarditis or severe asthma asvenous return is compromisedCauses of an absent radial pulse• Dissection of the aorta with subclavianinvolvement• Iatrogenic: post-catheterisation• Peripheral arterial embolus• Takayasu’s arteritis• Trauma1.1.3 Cardiac apexAn absent apical impulseThe apex may be impalpable in the following situations:• Obesity/emphysema• Right pneumonectomy with displacement• Pericardial effusion or constriction• Dextrocardia (palpable on right side of chest)Apex associationsPalpation of the apex beat (reflecting counter-clockwiseventricular movement striking the chest wallduring isovolumic contractions) can detect the followingpathological states:• Heaving: left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (andall its causes), sometimes associated withpalpable fourth heart sound• Thrusting/hyperdynamic: high left ventricularvolume (eg in mitral regurgitation, aorticregurgitation, patent ductus arteriosus (PDA),ventricular septal defect)• Tapping: palpable first heart sound in mitralstenosis• Displaced and diffuse/dyskinetic: leftventricular impairment and dilatation (eg dilatedcardiomyopathy, myocardial infarction (MI))• Double impulse: with dyskinesia is due to leftventricular aneurysm; without dyskinesia inhypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)• Pericardial knock: constrictive pericarditis• Parasternal heave: due to right ventricularhypertrophy (eg ASD, pulmonary hypertension,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD),pulmonary stenosis)• Palpable third heart sound: due to heart failureand severe mitral regurgitation1.1.4 Heart soundsAbnormalities of first heart sounds are given inTable 1.1 and of second heart sounds are given inTable 1.2.Table 1.1. Abnormalities of the first heart sound (S1): closure of mitral and tricuspid valvesLoud Soft Split VariableMobile mitral stenosis Immobile mitral stenosis RBBB Atrial fibrillationHyperdynamic states Hypodynamic states LBBB Complete heart blockTachycardic states Mitral regurgitation VTLeft-to-right shunts Poor ventricular function InspirationShort PR interval Long PR interval Ebstein’s anomalyLBBB, left bundle branch block; RBBB, right bundle branch block; VT, ventricular tachycardia4


CardiologyTable 1.2. Abnormalities of the second heart sound (S2): closure of aortic then pulmonary valves(,0.05 s apart)IntensitySplittingLoud: Fixed: Single S2:Systemic hypertension (loud A2)Pulmonary hypertension (loud P2)ASDSevere pulmonary stenosis/aortic stenosisHypertensionTachycardic states Widely split: Large VSDASD (loud P2) RBBB Tetralogy of FallotPulmonary stenosis Eisenmenger syndromeSoft or absent: Deep inspiration Pulmonary atresiaSevere aortic stenosis Mitral regurgitation ElderlyReversed split S2:LBBBRight ventricular pacingPDAAortic stenosisA2, aortic second sound; ASD, atrial septal defect; LBBB, left bundle branch block; P2, pulmonary second sound;PDA, patent ductus arteriosus; RBBB, right bundle branch block; VSD, ventricular septal defect<strong>Third</strong> heart sound (S3)Due to the passive filling of the ventricles on openingof the AV valves, audible in normal childrenand young adults. Pathological in cases of rapid leftventricular filling (eg mitral regurgitation, ventricularseptal defect (VSD), congestive cardiac failure andconstrictive pericarditis).Fourth heart sound (S4)Due to the atrial contraction that fills a stiff leftventricle, such as in LVH, amyloid, HCM and leftventricular ischaemia. It is absent in atrial fibrillation.Causes of valvular clicks• Aortic ejection: aortic stenosis, bicuspid aorticvalve• Pulmonary ejection: pulmonary stenosis• Mid-systolic: mitral valve prolapseOpening snap (OS)In mitral stenosis an OS can be present and occursafter S2 in early diastole. The closer it is to S2 thegreater the severity of mitral stenosis. It is absentwhen the mitral cusps become immobile due tocalcification, as in very severe mitral stenosis.1.2 CARDIAC INVESTIGATIONS1.2.1 Electrocardiography (ECG)Both the axis and sizes of QRS vectors give importantin<strong>for</strong>mation. Axes are defined:• –308 to +908: normal• –308 to –908: left axis• +908 to +1808: right axis• –908 to –1808: indeterminateTip – if the QRS is positive in leads 1 and aVF theaxis is normal.The causes of common abnormalities are given inthe box on p. 7. ECG strips illustrating typicalchanges in common disease states are shown inFigure 1.1.5


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Figure 1.1 ECG strips demonstrating typical changes in common disease states6


CardiologyCauses of common abnormalities in theECG• Causes of left axis deviation• Left bundle branch block (LBBB)• Left anterior hemi-block (LAHB)• LVH• Primum ASD• Cardiomyopathies• Tricuspid atresia• Low-voltage ECG• Pulmonary emphysema• Pericardial effusion• Myxoedema• Severe obesity• Incorrect calibration• Cardiomyopathies• Global ischaemia• Amyloid• Causes of right axis deviation• Infancy• Right bundle branch block (RBBB)• Right ventricular hypertrophy (eg lungdisease, pulmonary embolism, largesecundum ASD, severe pulmonarystenosis, tetralogy of Fallot)• Abnormalities of ECGs in athletes• Sinus arrhythmia• Sinus bradycardia• First-degree heart block• Wenckebach phenomenon• Junctional rhythmClinical diagnoses which can be made fromthe ECG of an asymptomatic patient• Atrial fibrillation• Complete heart block• HCM• ASDs (with RBBB)• Long QT and Brugada syndromes• Wolff–Parkinson–White (WPW) syndrome(delta waves)• Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia(cardiomyopathy)Short PR intervalThis is rarely less than 0.12 s; the most commoncauses are those of pre-excitation involving accessorypathways or of tracts bypassing the slow regionof the atrioventricular (AV) node; other causes doexist.• Pre-excitation• WPW syndrome• Lown–Ganong–Levine syndrome (shortPR syndrome)• Other• Ventricular extrasystole falling afterP wave• AV junctional rhythm (but P wave willusually be negative)• Low atrial rhythm• Coronary sinus escape rhythm• Normal variant (especially in the young)Causes of tall R waves inV1It is easy to spot tall R waves in V1. This lead largelyfaces the posterior wall of the left ventricle (LV) andthe mass of the right ventricle. As the overall vectoris predominantly towards the bulkier LV in normalsituations, the QRS is usually negative in V1. Thisbalance can be reversed in the following situations:• Right ventricular hypertrophy (myriad causes)• RBBB• Posterior infarction• Dextrocardia• WPW syndrome with left ventricular pathwayinsertion (often referred to as type A)• HCM (septal mass greater than posterior wall)Bundle branch block and ST-segmentabnormalitiesComplete bundle branch block is a failure or delayof impulse conduction to one ventricle from the AVnode, requiring conduction via the other bundle,and then transmission within the ventricular myocardium;this results in abnormal prolongation ofQRS duration (>120 ms) and abnormalities of the7


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>normally isoelectric ST segment. In contrast toRBBB, LBBB is always pathological.• Causes of LBBB• Ischaemic heart disease (recent or oldMI)• Hypertension• LVH• Aortic valve disease• Cardiomyopathy• Myocarditis• Post-valve replacement• Right ventricular pacemaker• Tachycardia with aberrancy orconcealed conduction• Ventricular ectopy• Causes of RBBB• Normal in the young• Right ventricular strain (eg pulmonaryembolus)• ASD• Ischaemic heart disease• Myocarditis• Idiopathic• Tachycardia with aberrancy orconcealed conduction• Ventricular ectopy• Causes of ST elevation• Early repolarisation• Acute MI• Pericarditis (saddle-shaped)• Ventricular aneurysm• Coronary artery spasm• During angioplasty• Non-standard ECG acquisition settings(eg on monitor)• Other ST-T wave changes (not elevation)• Ischaemia: ST depression,T inversion andpeaking• Digoxin therapy: downslopingST depression• Hypertrophy: ST depression,T inversion• Post-tachycardia: ST depression,T inversion• Hyperventilation: ST depression,T inversion andpeaking• Oesophageal/upper abdominalirritation:ST depression,T inversion• Cardiac contusion: ST depression,T inversion• Mitral valve prolapse:T wave inversion• Acute cerebral event(eg subarachnoid haemorrhage):ST depression,T inversion• Electrolyte abnormalitiesQ waves can be permanent (reflecting myocardialnecrosis) or transient (suggesting failure of myocardialfunction, but not necrosis).• Permanent Q waves• Transmural infarction• LBBB• WPW syndrome• HCM• Idiopathic cardiomyopathy• Amyloid heart disease• Neoplastic infiltration• Friedreich’s ataxia• Dextrocardia• Sarcoidosis• Progressive muscular dystrophy• Myocarditis (may resolve)• Transient Q waves• Coronary spasm• Hypoxia• Hyperkalaemia• Cardiac contusion• Hypothermia8


CardiologyPotassium and ECG changesThere is a reasonable correlation between plasmapotassium and ECG changes.• Hyperkalaemia• Tall T waves• Prolonged PR interval• Flattened/absent P waves• Very severe hyperkalaemia• Wide QRS• Sine wave pattern• Ventricular tachycardia/ventricularfibrillation/asystole• Hypokalaemia• Flat T waves, occasionally inverted• Prolonged PR interval• ST depression• Tall U wavesECG changes following coronary arterybypass surgery• U waves (hypothermia)• Saddle-shaped ST elevation (pericarditis)• PR-segment depression (pericarditis)• Low-voltage ECG in chest leads (pericardialeffusion)• Changing electrical alternans (alternating ECGaxis – cardiac tamponade)• S1Q3T3 (pulmonary embolus)• Atrial fibrillation• Q waves• ST-segment and T-wave changesElectrocardiographic techniques <strong>for</strong>prolonged monitoring• Holter monitoring: the ECG is monitored in oneor more leads <strong>for</strong> 24–72 h. The patient isencouraged to keep a diary in order to correlatesymptoms with ECG changes• External recorders: the patient keeps a monitorwith them <strong>for</strong> a period of days or weeks. At theonset of symptoms the monitor is placed to thechest and this records the ECG• Wearable loop recorders: the patient wears amonitor <strong>for</strong> several days or weeks. The devicerecords the ECG constantly on a self-erasingloop. At the time of symptoms, the patientactivates the recorder and a trace spanningsome several seconds be<strong>for</strong>e a period ofsymptoms to several minutes afterwards isstored• Implantable loop recorders: a loop recorder isimplanted subcutaneously in the pre-pectoralregion. The recorder is activated by the patientor according to pre-programmed parameters.Again the ECG data from several seconds be<strong>for</strong>esymptoms to several minutes after are stored;data are uploaded by telemetry. The battery lifeof the implantable loop recorder is approximately18 months1.2.2 EchocardiographyPrinciples of the techniqueSound waves emitted by a transducer are reflectedback differentially by tissues of variable acousticproperties. Moving structures (including fluid structures)reflect sound back as a function of their ownvelocity. The signal-to-noise ratio is improved byminimising the distance and number of acousticstructures between the transducer and the objectbeing recorded.A longitudinal beam differentiating structures byreflectivity plotted against time gives an M-modeimage. Allows accurate measurement of dimensions,eg LA size, end-diastolic dimension.A longitudinal beam measuring velocities gives aDoppler velocity – a continuous wave picks up thegreatest velocity along the line, a pulsed wavefocuses on a specific point and tissue Doppler on afixed point of myocardium. Velocities can be usedto calculate pressure gradients. Used to measurevalve gradients and wall motion parameters.A broad beam gives a two-dimensional movingimage that can be processed into a threedimensionalimage with appropriate echo probeand processing software. The standard windowspermit imaging of the cardiac chambers to assessstructural abnormalities and function.9


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Sampling multiple velocities within a two-dimensionalimage and assigning colours to the positiveand negative velocities gives a visual image ofcolour flow mapping. Ideal <strong>for</strong> assessing valvularregurgitation.Diagnostic uses of echocardiographyConventional echocardiography is used in the diagnosisof:• Pericardial effusion and tamponade• Valvular disease (including large vegetations)• HCM, dilated cardiomyopathy, LV mass andfunction• Cardiac tumours and intracardiac thrombus• Congenital heart disease (eg PDA; coarctation ofthe aorta)• Right ventricular function and pressureStress echo is used in the diagnosis of myocardialviability and ischaemia.Standard contrast echo is used in the diagnosis ofright-to-left shunts, especially ASD/VSD.Transpulmonary contrast echo is used to improvediscrimination between the blood pool and theendocardium to improve definition in those subjectswhose characteristics lead to poor image quality. Itis also used to diagnose LV thrombus and otherspecific conditions (eg the congenital failure ofmuscle fibre alignment (known as non-compaction)and apical hypertrophy).Tissue Doppler imaging is used to improve theaccuracy of LV wall motion assessments.Three-dimensional echo is used to investigate congenitalheart disease and in valve studies; it also hasresearch applications.Transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE) is indicatedin the diagnosis of aortic dissection, suspectedatrial thrombus, the assessment of vegetations orabscesses in endocarditis, prosthetic valve dysfunctionor leakage, intraoperative assessment of LVfunction, and where there is a technically suboptimaltransthoracic echocardiogram.Intravascular ultrasound gives high-resolutionimages of coronary arteries; it is useful in assessingplaque size and in stent deployment.Intracardiac ultrasound images the heart chambersfrom within; it is used mainly in those with congenitalheart disease and in electrophysiological procedures.Classic M-mode patternsDue to improvements in real-time image quality M-mode imaging is now used less in clinical practice;it does, however, allow interpretable traces to beprinted as still images, and these still occasionallyfeature in exams. Particular M-mode patterns thathave been used in past <strong>MRCP</strong> exams include:• Aortic regurgitation: fluttering of the anteriormitral leaflet is seen• HCM: systolic anterior motion (SAM) of themitral valve leaflets and asymmetrical septalhypertrophy (see Figure 1.2)• Mitral valve prolapse: one or both leafletsprolapse during systole• Mitral stenosis: the opening profile of the cuspsis flat and multiple echoes are seen when thereis calcification of the cusps1.2.3 Nuclear cardiology: myocardialperfusion imaging (MPI)Perfusion tracers such as thallium or technetium canbe used to gauge myocardial blood flow, both atrest and during exercise- or drug-induced stress.Tracer uptake is detected using tomograms anddisplayed in a colour scale in standard views.Lack of uptake may be:• Physiological: due to lung or breast tissueabsorption• Pathological: reflecting ischaemia, infarction orother conditions in which perfusionabnormalities also occur (eg HCM oramyloidosis)Pathological perfusion defects are categorised asfixed (scar) and reversible (viable but ischaemictissue).10


CardiologyFigure 1.2 Classic valvular disease patterns seen with M-mode echocardiographyMPI can be used to:• Detect infarction• Investigate atypical chest pains• Assess ventricular function• Determine prognosis and detect myocardiumthat may be ‘re-awakened’ from hibernationwith an improved blood supply (eg aftercoronary artery bypass grafting (CABG))1.2.4 Cardiac catheterisationCoronary and ventricular angiographyDirect injection of radio-opaque contrast into thecoronary arteries allows high-resolution assessmentof restrictive lesions and demonstrates any anomalies.Left ventriculography provides a measure ofventricular systolic function.Aortography in cardiac diagnosesImproved availability and resolution of crosssectionalimaging techniques have greatly reducedthe need <strong>for</strong> diagnostic aortography.The following can be identified with an aortogram:• AR• Coarctation of the aorta• Aortic dissection• PDA• Aberrant subclavian arteries• Aortic root abscess• Coronary artery anomalies• Paraprosthetic AR• Bypass grafts• Aortic root dilatation (eg Marfan syndrome)Right heart catheterisationCatheterisation of the right heart chambers andpulmonary artery (PA) can be undertaken as a wardinvestigation using a Swan–Ganz flotation catheteror as part of an X-ray-fluoroscopy-guided cathlabstudy.It allows right ventricular and PA angiography, anddirect pressure and saturation measurements of theright atrium (RA), right ventricle (RV) and PA. Wedgingthe catheter in small arteries prevents <strong>for</strong>wardpressure from being transmitted, so the transducermeasures the pressure of the pulmonary capillarybed, which is equal to pulmonary venous pressure.In the cathlab initial manoeuvres such as simultaneousLV catheterisation and contrast injection add tothe diagnostic value of the procedure: a gradientbetween pulmonary wedge (PV) pressure and leftventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) quantifiesmitral stenosis (usually previously diagnosed by11


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>echocardiography) and direct pulmonary angiographycan be per<strong>for</strong>med. Direct pulmonary angiographyhas now been largely replaced by CTangiography.Complications of cardiac catheterisationComplications are uncommon (approximately 5%,including minor complications); these include contrastallergy, local haemorrhage from puncture siteswith subsequent occurrence of thrombosis, falseaneurysm or arteriovenous (AV) mal<strong>for</strong>mation. Vasovagalreactions are common. Other complicationsare:• Coronary dissection (particularly the rightcoronary artery in women) and aortic dissectionor ventricular per<strong>for</strong>ation• Air or atheroma embolism: in the coronary orother arterial circulations, with consequentischaemia or strokes• Ventricular dysrhythmias: can even cause deathin the setting of left main stem disease• Mistaken cannulation and contrast injection intothe conus branch of the right coronary arterycan cause ventricular fibrillation• Overall mortality rates are quoted at ,1/1000cases1.2.5 Exercise stress testingThis is used in the investigation of coronary arterydisease, in exertion-induced arrhythmias, and in theassessment of cardiac workload and conductionabnormalities. Exercise tests also give diagnosticand prognostic in<strong>for</strong>mation post-infarction, and generatepatient confidence in rehabilitation after MI.Diagnostic sensitivity is improved if the test is conductedwith the patient having discontinued antianginal(especially rate-limiting) medication.The main contraindications to exercise testing includethose conditions where fatal ischaemia orarrhythmias may be provoked, or where exertionmay severely and acutely impair cardiac function.These include the following:• Severe aortic stenosis or HCM with markedoutflow obstruction• Acute myocarditis or pericarditis• Pyrexial or coryzal illness• Severe left main stem disease• Untreated congestive cardiac failure• Unstable angina• Dissecting aneurysm• Ongoing tachy- or bradyarrhythmias• Untreated severe hypertensionIndicators of a positive exercise test resultThe presence of each factor is additive in the overallpositive prediction of coronary artery disease:• Development of anginal symptoms• A fall in BP of .15 mmHg or failure to increaseBP with exercise• Arrhythmia development (particularlyventricular)• Poor workload capacity (may indicate poor leftventricular function)• Failure to achieve target heart rate (allowing <strong>for</strong>â-blockers)• .1 mm down-sloping or planar ST-segmentdepression, 80 ms after the J point• ST-segment elevation• Failure to achieve 9 min of the Bruce protocoldue to any of the points listedExercise tests have low specificity in the followingsituations (often as a result of resting ST-segmentabnormalities):• Ischaemia in young women with atypical chestpains• Atrial fibrillation• LBBB• WPW syndrome• LVH• Digoxin or â-blocker therapy• Anaemia• Hyperventilation• Biochemical abnormalities such ashypokalaemia12


Cardiology1.2.6 24-hour ambulatory bloodpressure monitoringThe limited availability and relative expense ofambulatory blood pressure monitoring prevents itsuse in all hypertensive patients. Specific areas ofusefulness include the following situations:• Assessing <strong>for</strong> ‘white coat’ hypertension• Borderline hypertensive cases that may not needtreatment• Evaluation of hypotensive symptoms• Identifying episodic hypertension (eg inphaeochromocytoma)• Assessing drug compliance and effects(particularly in resistant cases)• Nocturnal blood pressure dipper status (nondippersare at higher risk)1.2.7 Computed tomography (CT)CT has theoretical capability in both anatomical(coronary arteries, chamber dimension, pericardium)and functional (contractility, ischaemia, viability)assessments of the heart. It is the gold standardinvestigation <strong>for</strong>:• Pulmonary thromboembolic disease• Anatomical assessment of the pericardium (eg insuspected constriction)• Anomalous coronary artery origins (reliableimaging of the proximal third of major coronaryarteries)• Extramyocardial mediastinal massesOther indications include assessment of:• Chamber dimensions• Myocardial function, perfusion and ischaemia1.2.8 Magnetic resonance imaging(MRI)Cardiac MRI is the gold standard technique <strong>for</strong>assessment of myocardial function, ischaemia, perfusionand viability, cardiac chamber anatomy andimaging of the great vessels. It has a useful adjunctiverole in pericardial/mediastinal imaging. Majordrawbacks are its contraindication in patients withcertain implanted devices (eg pacemakers) andtime (consequently also cost), as a full functionalstudy can take about 45 minutes. The contrast used(gadolinium), while not directly nephrotoxic, is subjectto increased risk of metabolic toxicity in renallyimpaired individuals.Chief indications of cardiac MRI:• Myocardial ischaemia and viability assessment• Differential diagnosis of structural heart disease(congenital and acquired)• Chamber anatomy definition• Initial diagnosis and serial follow-up of greatvessel pathology (especially aortopathy)• Pericardial and mediastinal structural assessment1.3 VALVULAR DISEASE ANDENDOCARDITIS1.3.1 MurmursBenign flow murmurs: soft, short systolic murmursheard along the left sternal edge to the pulmonaryarea, without any other cardiac auscultatory, ECGor chest X-ray abnormalities. Thirty per cent ofchildren may have an innocent flow murmur.Cervical venous hum: continuous when upright andis reduced by lying; occurs with a hyperdynamiccirculation or with jugular vein compression.Large AV fistula of the arm: may cause a harsh flowmurmur across the upper mediastinum.Effect of posture on murmurs: standing significantlyincreases the murmurs of mitral valve prolapse andHCM only. Squatting and passive leg raising increasecardiac afterload and there<strong>for</strong>e decrease themurmur of HCM and mitral valve prolapse, whilstincreasing most other murmurs such as ventricularseptal defect, aortic, mitral and pulmonary regurgitation,and aortic stenosis.Effect of respiration on murmurs: inspiration accentuatesright-sided murmurs by increasing venousreturn, whereas held expiration accentuates leftsidedmurmurs. The strain phase of a Valsalvamanoeuvre reduces venous return, stroke volume13


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>and arterial pressure, decreasing all valvular murmursbut increasing the murmur of HCM and mitralvalve prolapse.Classi¢cation of murmurs• Mid-/late systolic murmurs• Innocent murmur• Aortic stenosis or sclerosis• Coarctation of the aorta• Pulmonary stenosis• HCM• Papillary muscle dysfunction• ASD (due to high pulmonary flow)• Mitral valve prolapse• Mid-diastolic murmurs• Mitral stenosis or ‘Austin Flint’ due toaortic regurgitant jet• Carey Coombs (rheumatic fever)• High AV flow states (ASD, VSD, PDA,anaemia, mitral regurgitation, tricuspidregurgitation)• Atrial tumours (particularly if causingAV flow disturbance)• Continuous murmurs• PDA• Ruptured sinus of Valsalva aneurysm• ASD• Large AV fistula• Anomalous left coronary artery• Intercostal AV fistula• ASD with mitral stenosis• Bronchial collaterals1.3.2 Mitral stenosisTwo-thirds of patients presenting with this arewomen. The most common cause remains chronicrheumatic heart disease; rarer causes includecongenital disease, carcinoid, systemic lupuserythematosus (SLE) and mucopolysaccharidoses(glycoprotein deposits on cusps). Stenosis may occurat the cusp, commissure or chordal level.• Anticoagulation <strong>for</strong> atrial fibrillation protectsfrom 173 increased risk of thromboembolismFeatures of severe mitral stenosis• Symptoms• Dyspnoea with minimal activity• Haemoptysis• Dysphagia (due to left atriumenlargement)• Palpitations due to atrial fibrillation• Chest X-ray• Left atrial or right ventricularenlargement• Splaying of subcarinal angle (.908)• Pulmonary congestion or hypertension• Pulmonary haemosiderosis• Echo• Doming of leaflets• Heavily calcified cusps• Direct orifice area ,1.0 cm 2• Signs• Low pulse pressure• Soft first heart sound• Long diastolic murmur and apical thrill(rare)• Very early opening snap, ie closer to S2(lost if valves immobile)• Right ventricular heave or loud P2• Pulmonary regurgitation (Graham Steellmurmur)• Tricuspid regurgitation• Cardiac catheterisation• Pulmonary capillary wedge end diastoleto left ventricular end-diastolic pressure(LVEDP) gradient .15 mmHg• Left atrium (LA) pressures .25 mmHg• Elevated RV and PA pressures• High pulmonary vascular resistance• Cardiac output ,2.5 l min –1 m –2 withexercise14


CardiologyMitral balloon valvuloplastyValvuloplasty using an Inoue balloon requires eithera trans-septal or a retrograde approach and is usedonly in suitable cases where echo shows that:• The mitral leaflet tips and valvular chordae arenot heavily thickened, distorted or calcified• The mitral cusps are mobile at the base• There is minimal or no mitral regurgitation• There is no left atrial thrombus seen on TOE1.3.3 Mitral regurgitation (MR)The full structure of the mitral valve includes theannulus, cusps, chordae and papillary musculature,and abnormalities of any of these can cause regurgitation.The presence of symptoms and increasingleft ventricular dilatation are indicators <strong>for</strong> surgeryin the chronic setting. Operative mortalities are2%–7% <strong>for</strong> valvular replacements in patients withNYHA grade II–III symptoms. Various techniqueshave revolutionised mitral valve surgery, trans<strong>for</strong>mingoutcomes from being no better than medicaltherapy with replacement to almost normal withrepair. In skilled surgical hands the repair is tailoredto the precise anatomical abnormality.Functional MR is a term used to describe MR that isdue to stretching of the annulus secondary to ventriculardilatation.Main causes of MR• Myxomatous degeneration• Functional, secondary to ventriculardilatation• Mitral valve prolapse• Ischaemic papillary muscle rupture• Congenital heart diseases• Collagen disorders• Rheumatic heart disease• EndocarditisIndicators of the severity of MR• Small-volume pulse• Left ventricular enlargement due to overload• Presence of S3• Atrial fibrillation• Mid-diastolic flow murmur• Precordial thrill, signs of pulmonaryhypertension or congestion (cardiac failure)Signs of predominant MR in mixed mitralvalve disease• Soft S1; S3 present• Displaced and hyperdynamic apex (leftventricular enlargement)• ECG showing LVH and left axis deviationMitral valve prolapseThis condition occurs in 5% of the population andis commonly over-diagnosed (depending on theechocardiography criteria applied). The patients areusually female and may present with chest pains,palpitations or fatigue, although it is often detectedincidentally in asymptomatic patients. Squatting increasesthe click and standing increases the murmur,but the condition may be diagnosed in theabsence of the murmur by echo. Often there ismyxomatous degeneration and redundant valvetissue due to deposition of acid mucopolysaccharidematerial. Antibiotic prophylaxis be<strong>for</strong>e dentalor surgical interventions should be recommended<strong>for</strong> those with a murmur. Mitral valve prolapse isusually eminently suitable <strong>for</strong> mitral valve repairalthough this should only be undertaken if theseverity of the regurgitation associated with thecondition justifies it (see above). Several conditionsare associated with mitral valve prolapse (see overleaf),and patients with the condition are prone tocertain sequelae.Sequelae of mitral valve prolapse:• Embolic phenomena• Rupture of mitral valve chordae• Dysrhythmias with QT prolongation• Sudden death• Cardiac neurosis15


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Conditions associated with mitral valveprolapse• Coronary artery disease• Polycystic kidney disease• Cardiomyopathy – dilated cardiomyopathy/HCM• Secundum ASD• WPW syndrome• PDA• Marfan syndrome• Pseudoxanthoma elasticum• Osteogenesis imperfecta• Myocarditis• SLE; polyarteritis nodosa• Muscular dystrophy• Left atrial myxoma1.3.4 Aortic regurgitation (AR)Patients with severe chronic aortic regurgitation (AR)have the largest end-diastolic volumes of those withany <strong>for</strong>m of heart disease and also have a greaternumber of non-cardiac signs. AR may occur acutely(as in dissection or endocarditis) or chronicallywhen the left ventricle has time to accommodate.Causes of AR• Valve inflammation• Chronic rheumatic• Infective endocarditis• Rheumatoid arthritis; SLE• Hurler syndrome• Aortitis• Syphilis• Ankylosing spondylitis• Reiter syndrome• Psoriatic arthropathy• Aortic dissection/trauma• Hypertension• Bicuspid aortic valve• Ruptured sinus of Valsalva aneurysm• VSD with prolapse of (R) coronary cusp• Disorders of collagen• Marfan syndrome (aortic aneurysm)• Hurler syndrome• Pseudoxanthoma elasticumEponymous signs associated with AR• Quincke’s sign – nail-bed fluctuation ofcapillary flow• Corrigan’s pulse – (waterhammer);collapsing radial pulse• Corrigan’s sign – visible carotid pulsation• De Musset’s sign – head nodding with eachsystole• Duroziez’s sign – audible femoral bruitswith diastolic flow (indicating moderateseverity)• Traube’s sign – ‘pistol shots’ (systolicauscultatory finding of the femoral arteries)• Austin Flint murmur – functional mitraldiastolic flow murmur• Argyll Robertson pupils – aetiologicalconnection with syphilitic aortitis• Müller’s sign – pulsation of the uvulaIndications <strong>for</strong> surgeryAcute severe AR will not be tolerated <strong>for</strong> long by anormal ventricle and there<strong>for</strong>e requires prompt surgery,except in the case of infection, where delay<strong>for</strong> antibiotic therapy is preferable (if haemodynamicstability allows). At 10 years, 50% of patients withmoderate chronic AR are alive, but once symptomsoccur deterioration is rapid.16


CardiologyFeatures of AR indicative of the need<strong>for</strong> surgery• Symptoms of dyspnoea/left ventricularfailure• Reducing exercise tolerance• Rupture of sinus of Valsalva aneurysm• Infective endocarditis not responsive tomedical treatment• Enlarging aortic root diameter in Marfansyndrome with AR• Enlarging heart• End-systolic diameter .55 mm at echo• Pulse pressure .100 mmHg• Diastolic pressure ,40 mmHg• Lengthening diastolic murmur• ECG: lateral lead T-wave inversion1.3.5 Aortic stenosis (AS)Patients often present with the classic triad of symptoms:angina, dyspnoea and syncope. Echo andcardiac catheterisation gradients of .60 mmHg areconsidered severe and are associated with a valvearea ,0.5 cm 2 . The gradient may be reduced in thepresence of deteriorating left ventricular function ormitral stenosis, or significant AR.• Causes of AS: may be congenital bicuspid valve,degenerative calcification (common in theelderly) and post-rheumatic disease• Subvalvular: causes of aortic gradients includeHCM and subaortic membranous stenosis, whilesupravalvular stenosis is due to aorticcoarctation, or Williams syndrome (with elfinfacies, mental retardation, hypercalcaemia)• Sudden death: may occur in AS or insubvalvular stenosis due to ventriculartachycardia. The vulnerability to ventriculartachycardia is due to LVH• Complete heart block: may be due tocalcification involving the upper ventricularseptal tissue housing the conducting tissue. Thiscan also occur post-operatively (after valvereplacement) due to trauma• Calcified emboli: can arise in severe calcific AS.• All symptomatic patients should be considered<strong>for</strong> surgery: operative mortality <strong>for</strong> AS ispredominantly related to the absence (2%–8%)or presence (10%–25%) of left ventricularfailureIndicators of severe AS• Symptoms of syncope or left ventricularfailure• Signs of left ventricular failure• Absent A2• Paradoxically split A2• Presence of precordial thrill• S4• Slow-rising pulse with narrow pulsepressure• Late peaking of long murmur• Valve area ,0.5 cm 2 on echocardiography1.3.6 Tricuspid regurgitation (TR)Causes of severe TR include the following:• Functional, due to right ventricular dilatation(commonly co-exists with significant MR)• Infection. The tricuspid valve is vulnerable toinfection introduced by venous cannulation(iatrogenic or through intravenous drug abuse)• Carcinoid (nodular hepatomegaly andtelangiectasia)• Post-rheumatic• Ebstein’s anomaly: tricuspid valve dysplasia witha more apical position to the valve. Patientshave cyanosis and there is an association withpulmonary atresia or ASD and, less commonly,congenitally corrected transposition1.3.7 Prosthetic valvesValve prostheses may be metal or tissue (bioprosthetic).Mechanical valves are more durable buttissue valves do not require full lifelong anticoagulation.All prostheses must be covered with17


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>antibiotic therapy <strong>for</strong> dental and surgical procedures;they have a residual transvalvular gradientacross them.Mechanical valves• Starr–Edwards: ball and cage – ejection systolicmurmur (ESM) in the aortic area and an openingsound in the mitral position are normal• Bjork–Shiley: single tilt disc – audible clickswithout stethoscope• St Jude (Carbomedics): double tilting discs withclicksTissue valves• Allografts: porcine or bovine three-cusp valve –3 months’ anticoagulation sometimesrecommended until tissue endothelialisation. Noneed <strong>for</strong> long-term anticoagulation if patient isin sinus rhythm• Homografts: usually cadaveric and, again, needno long-term anticoagulationInfection of prosthetic valves• Mortality is still as high as 60% depending onthe organism• Within 6 months of implantation, it is usuallydue to colonisation by Staphylococcusepidermidis• Septal abscesses may cause PR-intervallengthening• Valvular sounds may be muffled by vegetations;new murmurs may occur• Mild haemolysis can occur, and is detected bythe presence of urobilinogen in the urine• Dehiscence is an ominous feature requiringurgent interventionAnticoagulation in pregnancyWarfarin may cause fetal haemorrhage and has ateratogenicity risk of 5%–30%. This risk is dosedependentand abnormalities include chondrodysplasia,mental impairment, optic atrophy and nasalhypoplasia. The risk of spontaneous abortion maybe increased. There is no agreed consensus on theideal strategy: warfarin, unfractionated heparin andlow-molecular-weight heparin all have advocatesand detractors.1.3.8 Infective endocarditisClinical presentationCommonly presents with non-specific symptoms ofmalaise, tiredness and infective-type symptoms.Heart failure secondary to valvular regurgitation orheart block may also occur as may an incidentalpresentation in the context of another primary infection.Signs of infective endocarditisAs well as cardiac murmurs detected at auscultation,there are several other characteristic features ofinfective endocarditis:• Systemic signs of fever and arthropathy• Hands and feet: splinter haemorrhages, Oslernodes (painful), Janeway lesions (painless) andclubbing (late); needle-track signs may occur inarm or groin• Retinopathy: Roth spots• Hepatosplenomegaly• Signs of arterial embolisation (eg stroke ordigital ischaemia)• Vasculitic rash• Streptococcus viridans (Æ-haemolytic group) arestill the most common organisms, occurring in50% of cases• Marantic (metastatic-related) and SLE-related(Libman–Sacks) endocarditis are causes of noninfectiveendocarditis• Almost any pathogenic organism may beimplicated, particularly in theimmunocompromised patientSee also Section 1.3.7 on ‘Prosthetic valves’ andTable 1.3.18


CardiologyTable 1.3. Infective endocarditisGroups affected byendocarditis% of all cases ofendocarditisChronic rheumatic disease 30No previous valve disease 40Intravenous drug abuse 10Congenital defects 10Prosthetic 10Management of infective endocarditisThe aim of treatment is to sterilise the valve medically(usually 4–6 weeks of IV antibiotics) thenassess whether the valvular damage sustained (egdegree of incompetance) or the risk of recurrence(eg if prosthetic valves) mandates surgical replacement.Earlier operations are only undertaken ifclincally necessary as outcomes are poorer.• Poor prognostic factors in endocarditis• Prosthetic valve• Staphylococcus aureus infection• Culture-negative endocarditis• Depletion of complement levels• Indications <strong>for</strong> surgery• Cardiac failure or haemodynamiccompromise• Extensive valve incompetence• Large vegetations• Septic emboli• Septal abscess• Fungal infection• Antibiotic-resistant endocarditis• Failure to respond to medical therapyAntibiotic prophylaxisThe conditions listed in the next box are associatedwith an increased risk of endocarditis.• Acquired valvular heart disease withstenosis or regurgitation• Valve replacement• Structural congenital heart disease,including surgically corrected or palliatedstructural conditions, but excluding isolatedASD, fully repaired VSD or fully repairedPDA, and closure devices that are judgedto be endothelialised• Previous infective endocarditis• HCMAntibiotic and chlorhexidine mouthwash prophylaxisis no longer recommended <strong>for</strong> dental procedures,endoscopies or obstetric procedures.Patients should be made aware of non-medical riskproneactivities (eg IV drug use, piercings) and thesymptoms of possible endocarditis.1.4 CONGENITAL HEART DISEASECauses of congenital acyanotic heartdisease*• With shunts• Aortic coarctation (with VSD or PDA)• VSD• ASD• PDA• Partial anomalous venous drainage (withASD)• Without shunts• Congenital AS• Aortic coarctation*Associated shunts19


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Causes of cyanotic heart disease• With shunts• Tetralogy of Fallot (VSD)• Severe Ebstein’s anomaly (ASD)• Complete transposition of great vessels(ASD VSD/PDA)• Without shunts• Tricuspid atresia• Severe pulmonary stenosis• Pulmonary atresia• Hypoplastic left heart1.4.1 Atrial septal defect (ASD)ASDs are the most common congenital defectsfound in adulthood. Rarely, they may present asstroke in young people, due to paradoxical embolusthat originated in the venous system and reachedthe cerebral circulation via right-to-left shunting.Fixed splitting of the second heart sound is thehallmark of an uncorrected ASD. There may be aleft parasternal heave and a pulmonary ESM due toincreased blood flow. There are three main subtypes:• Secundum (70%): central fossa ovalis defectsoften associated with mitral valve prolapse(10%–20% of cases). ECG shows incomplete orcomplete RBBB with right axis deviation. Notethat a patent <strong>for</strong>amen ovale (slit-like deficiencyin the fossa ovalis) occurs in up to 25% of thepopulation, but this does not allow equalisationof atrial pressures, unlike ASD• Primum (15%): sited above the AV valves, oftenassociated with varying degrees of mitral andtricuspid regurgitation and occasionally a VSD,and thus usually picked up earlier in childhood.ECG shows RBBB, left axis deviation, firstdegreeheart block. Associated with Downsyndrome, Klinefelter syndrome and Noonansyndrome• Sinus venosus (15%): defect in the upperseptum, often associated with anomalouspulmonary venous drainage directly into theright atriumOperative closure is recommended with pulmonaryto-systolicflow ratios above 1.5:1. Closure of secundumdefects may be per<strong>for</strong>med via cardiac catheterisation.Holt–Oram syndrome: (triphalangeal thumb withASD) is a rare syndrome (autosomal dominant withincomplete penetration). It is associated with absence(or reduction anomalies) of the upper arm.Lutembacher syndrome: a rare combination of anASD with mitral stenosis (the latter is probablyrheumatic in origin).Investigations <strong>for</strong> ASDsRight atrial and right ventricular dilatation may beseen on any imaging technique as may pulmonaryartery conus enlargement. Other characteristic featuresare:• Chest X-ray: pulmonary plethora• Echo: paradoxical septal motion, septal defectand right-to-left flow of contrast during venousinjection with Valsalva manoeuvre• Catheterisation: pulmonary hypertension –raised right ventricular pressures and step-up inoxygen saturation between various parts of theright circulation (eg SVC to high right atrium)Treatment of ASDThere is no specific medical therapy <strong>for</strong> ASDs; theyare managed by either closure (percutaneous orsurgical) or clinical and echocardiographic followup.Indications <strong>for</strong> closure:• Symptoms (dyspnoea)• Systemic embolism• Chamber dilatation• Elevated right heart pressures• Significant left-to-right shunt20


Cardiology1.4.2 Ventricular septal defect (VSD)VSDs are the most common isolated congenitaldefect (2/1000 births; around 30% of all congenitaldefects); spontaneous closure occurs in 30%–50%of cases (usually muscular or membranous types).As with ASDs, closure may be per<strong>for</strong>med via cardiotomyor percutaneously.Indications <strong>for</strong> closure• Significant left-to-right shunt• Associated with other defect requiringcardiotomy• Elevated right heart pressure• Endocarditis• Irreversible pulmonary changes may occur from1 year of age, with vascular hypertrophy andpulmonary arteriolar thrombosis, leading toEisenmenger syndrome• Parasternal thrill and pansystolic murmur arepresent. The murmur may be ejection systolic invery small or very large defects. With largedefects the aortic component of the secondsound is obscured, or even a single/palpable S2is heard; a mitral diastolic murmur may occur.The apex beat is typically hyperdynamicOnce the Eisenmenger complex develops, the thrilland left sternal edge (LSE) murmur abate and signsare of pulmonary hypertension regurgitation andright ventricular failure. Surgery should occur earlierto avoid this situation; otherwise a combined heart/lung transplant would be required.• Other cardiac associations of VSD• PDA (10%)• AR (5%)• Pulmonary stenosis• ASD• Tetralogy of Fallot• Coarctation of the aorta• Types of VSD• Muscular• Membranous• AV defect• Infundibular• Into the right atrium (Gerbode defect)1.4.3 Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)PDA is common in premature babies, particularlyfemale infants born at high altitude; also if maternalrubella occurs in the first trimester. The connectionoccurs between the pulmonary trunk and the descendingaorta, usually just distal to the origin of theleft subclavian artery. PDA often occurs with otherabnormalities.Key features of PDA• A characteristic left subclavicular thrill• Enlarged left heart and apical heave• Continuous ‘machinery’ murmur• Wide pulse pressure and bounding pulseSigns of pulmonary hypertension and Eisenmengersyndrome develop in about 5% of cases. Indometacincloses the duct in about 90% of babieswhile intravenous prostaglandin E 1 may reverse thenatural closure (useful when PDA is associated withcoarctation, hypoplastic left heart syndrome and incomplete transposition of the great vessels, as it willhelp to maintain flow between the systemic andpulmonary circulations). The PDA may also beclosed thoracoscopically or percutaneously.1.4.4 Coarctation of the aortaCoarctation can present in infancy with heart failureor in adulthood (third decade) with hypertension,exertional breathlessness or leg weakness. This‘shelf-like’ obstruction of the aortic arch, usuallydistal to the left subclavian artery, is 2–5 times morecommon in males and is responsible <strong>for</strong> about 7%of congenital heart defects.21


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Treatment is by surgical resection, preferably withend-to-end aortic anastomosis, or by balloon angioplasty<strong>for</strong> recurrence after surgery (which occurs in5%–10% of cases). Complications may occur despiteresection/repair and these include hypertension,heart failure, berry aneurysm rupture,premature coronary artery disease and aortic dissection(in the third or fourth decade of life).Associations of coarctation• Cardiac• Bicuspid aortic valve (and thus AS AR) in 10%–20%• PDA• VSD• Mitral valve disease• Non-cardiac• Berry aneurysms (circle of Willis)• Turner syndrome• Renal abnormalities• Signs of coarctation• Hypertension• Radio–femoral delay of arterial pulse• Absent femoral pulses• Mid-systolic or continuous murmur(infraclavicular)• Subscapular bruits• Rib notching on chest X-ray• Post-stenotic aortic dilatation on chestX-ray1.4.5 Eisenmenger syndromeReversal of left-to-right shunt, due to massive irreversiblepulmonary hypertension (usually due tocongenital cardiovascular mal<strong>for</strong>mations), leads toEisenmenger syndrome. Signs of development include:• Decrease of original pansystolic (left-to-right)murmur• Decreasing intensity of tricuspid/pulmonary flowmurmurs• Single S2 with louder intensity, palpable P2;right ventricular heave• Appearance of Graham Steell murmur due topulmonary regurgitation22• PSM and ‘v’ waves due to tricuspid regurgitation(TR)• Clubbing and central cyanosisEisenmenger syndrome• Causes• VSD (the Eisenmenger complex)• ASD• PDA• Complications of Eisenmenger syndrome• Right ventricular failure• Massive haemoptysis• Cerebral embolism/abscess• Infective endocarditis (rare)1.4.6 Tetralogy of FallotThe most common cause of cyanotic congenitalheart disease (10%), usually presenting after age6 months (as the condition may worsen after birth).Key features• Pulmonary stenosis (causes the systolicmurmur)• Right ventricular hypertrophy• VSD• Overriding of the aorta• Right-sided aortic knuckle (25%)Clinical features• Cyanotic attacks (pulmonary infundibularspasm)• Clubbing• Parasternal heave• Systolic thrill• Palpable A2• Soft ejection systolic murmur (inverselyrelated to pulmonary gradient)• Single S2 (inaudible pulmonary closure)• ECG features of right ventricularhypertrophy


CardiologyPossible complications of Fallot’s• Endocarditis• Polycythaemia• Coagulopathy• Paradoxical embolism• Cerebral abscess• Ventricular arrhythmias• Cyanotic attacks worsen with catecholamines,hypoxia and acidosis. The murmur lessens ordisappears as the right ventricular outflowgradient increases• Squatting reduces the right-to-left shunt byincreasing systemic vascular resistance; it alsoreduces venous return of acidotic blood fromlower extremities, and hence reducesinfundibular spasm• The presence of a systolic thrill and an intensepulmonary murmur differentiates the conditionfrom Eisenmenger syndrome• A Blalock shunt operation results in weakerpulses in the arm from which the subclavianartery is diverted to the pulmonary artery1.4.7 Important post-surgicalcirculationsSystemic right ventricleTransposition of the great vessels and similar conditionsin which the right ventricle supplies the aortaand the left ventricle supplies the pulmonary arteryare now treated by arterial switch. Effectively this isa complete correction.Prior to the development of the arterial switchprocedure, treatment was by ‘venous redirection’ –the vena cavae redirected via the atria to the leftventricle and the pulmonary veins to the rightventricle via the atria, with the morphological rightventricle then pumping oxygenated blood into theaorta. However, there was a high risk of ventriculardysfunction, valve regurgitation and ventricular arrhythmiasin these patients and decompensationwould be provoked by development of atrial arrhythmias.Single ventricular circulationIndividuals born with only one functional ventricleare treated by redirecting the vena cavae directlyinto the pulmonary arteries (total cavopulmonarycorrection) and now do very well. Early versions ofthis operation (the classic Fontan) used the rightatrium between the vena cavae, but this often led toatrial dilatation and then fibrillation with a risk ofdecompensation.Common congenital circulationsCommon congenital circulations are summarised inTable 1.4 overleaf.1.5 ARRHYTHMIAS AND PACINGAtrial fibrillation (AF) remains the most commoncardiac arrhythmia, with incidence increasing withage (Framingham data indicate a prevalence of 76/1000 males and 63/1000 females aged 85–94years). Atrial flutter frequently co-exists with atrialfibrillation, and although it has a different immediatecausal mechanism it is a reflection of the sameunderlying disease. These arrhythmias assume particularsignificance because of the stroke risk associatedwith them.‘SVT’ is the term usually used to indicate a presumedre-entry tachycardia involving the AV nodeor an accessory pathway.Ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillationare life-threatening conditions, but there is a clearevidence base <strong>for</strong> the use of implantable cardioverterdefibrillators in both primary and secondaryprevention (see Appendix II). Anti-arrhythmic drugsor catheter ablation may be useful adjuncts to treatmentor, in some cases, they can be used asalternatives to defibrillators.1.5.1 BradyarrhythmiasAny heart rate below 60 beats per minute is abradycardia. A bradyarrhythmia is a pathologicalbradycardia. Bradyarrhythmias are considered accordingto their prognostic significance and sympto-23


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Table 1.4. Common congenital circulationsCardinalfeaturesPulmonaryhypertensionVentriculardysfunctionVentriculararrhythmiasEndocarditis Cyanosis AtrialarrhythmiasSystemicembolismTreatment ofchoiceVSD PansystolicmurmurMay develop Late feature If ventricledilatesHigh risk inrestrictivedefectsOnly aftershuntreversesPercutaneous orsurgical closure<strong>for</strong> significantshunt orendocarditisASD Fixed splitsecondsoundMay develop Low risk Only aftershuntreversesAtrialfibrillation,typical andatypicalflutterAssociatedwithparadoxicalemboliPercutaneous orsurgical closure<strong>for</strong> significantshunt or emboliPDA ContinuousmurmurMay develop High risk Only aftershuntreversesPercutaneousclosureTranspositionof the greatvesselsCyanosis If rightventricleused <strong>for</strong>systemiccirculationIf ventricledilatesEarly feature Arterial switchSinglefunctioningventricleCyanosis,heart failureIn someanatomicalvariantsEarly feature TotalcavopulmonaryconnectionSystemicrightventriclePost-surgicalorcongenital,correctedtranspositionLate feature AfterventriculardilatationEspeciallypost-surgicaltypes ofanatomyMedicalmanagement ofheart failure andarrhythmias24


Cardiologymatic impact. High-grade AV block (Mobitz 2 orcomplete) is associated with sudden death andpatients should be paced urgently even if asymptomatic.Permanent pacing is very effective in reducingsymptoms in most bradyarrhythmias; theexception is neurocardiogenic syncope where theresults are disappointing.Common bradyarrhythmias and associatedconditionsNeurocardiogenic symptomsAn exaggerated vasodepressor (hypotension), cardioinhibitory(bradycardic) or mixed reflex may causesyncope or presyncope. Various drugs have beentried as treatment, with limited success. In patientswith a predominant cardioinhibitory component,dual chamber pacing may reduce the severity andfrequency of syncopal episodes but results are oftendisappointing.Sinus node diseaseSinus bradycardia and sinus pauses can causesyncope, presyncope or non-specific symptoms.Thyroid function and electrolytes should bechecked on presentation and corrected prior to consideringpacemaker therapy. Pacing is only indicatedin significantly symptomatic cases (as there isno prognostic benefit of pacing in sinus nodedisease).First-degree AV blockA PR interval of .200 ms is abnormal but usuallyrequires no treatment. The combinations of firstdegreeAV block with (1) LBBB, (2) RBBB with axisdeviation or (3) with alternating LBBB and RBBB isinterpreted as trifascicular block (more accuratelyblock in two fascicles and delay in the third). Ifassociated with syncope, trifascicular block representsan indication <strong>for</strong> pacing on both prognosticand symptomatic grounds.Second-degree Mobitz 1 (Wenckebach) AVblockProgressive prolongation and then block of the PRinterval is categorised as Mobitz 1. It may benormal during sleep and in young, physically fitindividuals (who have high vagal tone). If it occurswhen the patient is awake and is associated withsymptoms in older people, pacing may be indicatedon symptomatic grounds.High-grade AV block (second-degree Mobitz 2block and third-degree complete heart block)Bradycardias with more than one P wave per QRScomplex (second-degree Mobitz 2) or with AVdissociation are grouped together as high-grade AVblock. Untreated, they are associated with mortalitythat may exceed 50% at 1 year, particularly inpatients aged over 80 years and in those with nonrheumaticstructural heart disease. Pacing is indicatedon prognostic grounds even in the asymptomatic.• Complete heart block is the most commonreason <strong>for</strong> permanent pacing• When related to an infarction, high-grade AVblock occurs mostly with right coronary arteryocclusion, as the AV nodal branch is usuallyone of the distal branches of the right coronaryartery• In patients with an anterior infarct, high-gradeAV block is a poor prognostic feature, indicatingextensive ischaemia• Congenital cases may be related to connectivetissue diseases; however, in patients with normalexercise capacities, recent studies show that theprognosis is not as benign as was previouslythought and pacing is there<strong>for</strong>e recommendedin a wide range of circumstances (see ESCguidelines by Vardas et al. Eur Heart J, 2007;28:2256–95)TachyarrhythmiasTachyarrhythmias are caused by re-entry, triggeredactivity or automaticity:• Re-entry – the arrhythmia is anatomicallydependent and usually the primary problem asopposed to sequelae of another reversible state• Automaticity – arrhythmia is often secondary toa systemic cause (eg electrolyte imbalance,sepsis, adrenergic drive) and is multifocal25


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>• Triggered activity – shares features of bothmechanisms and is seen in both primaryarrhythmias and in drug toxicity1.5.2 Supraventricular tachycardiasThere are two major groups of re-entrant tachycardiasoften described as SVT:• AV nodal re-entry tachycardia (AVNRT):involves a re-entry circuit in and around the AVnode• AV re-entry tachycardia (AVRT): this involvesan accessory pathway between the atria andventricles some distance from the AV node (egWPW syndrome and related conditions)AV nodal re-entry tachycardiaDifferential conduction in tissue around the AVnode allows a micro re-entry circuit to be maintained,resulting in a regular tachycardia.Accessory pathwaysAn accessory pathway that connects the atrium andventricle mediates the tachycardia by enabling retrogradeconduction from ventricle to atrium. Moreseriously, the accessory pathway may predispose tounrestricted conduction of AF from atria to ventriclesas a result of anterograde conduction throughthe pathway. This may lead to ventricular fibrillation.WPW is said to be present when a delta wave(partial pathway-mediated pre-excitation) is presenton the resting ECG. Associations with WPWinclude: Ebstein’s anomaly (may have multiplepathways), HCM, mitral valve prolapse and thyrotoxicosis;it is more common in men.Some accessory pathways are not manifest by adelta wave on the resting ECG but are still able toparticipate in a tachycardia circuit.Atrial tachycardias, including flutter, AF, sinus tachycardiaand fascicular ventricular tachycardia may allbe mistaken <strong>for</strong> SVT.1.5.3 Atrial arrhythmiasAtrial £utterThe atrial rate is usually between 250 and 350beats/min and is often seen with a ventricular responseof 150 beats/min (2:1 block). The block mayvary between a 1:1 ratio and a 1:4 or even a 1:5ratio. Isolated atrial flutter (without atrial fibrillation)has a lower association with thromboembolism;however, recommendations <strong>for</strong> anticoagulation arethe same as <strong>for</strong> AF.• The ventricular response may be slowed byincreasing the vagal block of the AV node (egcarotid sinus massage) or by adenosine, which‘uncovers’ the flutter waves on ECG• This is the most likely arrhythmia to respond toDC cardioversion with low energies (eg 25 volts)• Amiodarone and sotalol may chemicallycardiovert, slow the ventricular response or actas prophylactic agents• Radiofrequency ablation is curative in up to95% of casesAtrial flutter is described as typical when associatedwith a sawtooth atrial pattern in the inferior leadsand positive flutter waves in V1. Atypical flutterstend to occur in congenital heart disease or aftersurgery or prior ablation.Atrial ¢brillation (AF)This arrhythmia is due to multiple wavelet propagationin different directions. The source of the arrhythmiamay be myocardial tissue in the openingsof the four pulmonary veins, which enter into theposterior aspect of the left atrium, and this is particularlythe case in younger patients with paroxysmalAF. AF may be paroxysmal, persistent (but‘cardiovertable’) or permanent, and in all threestates is a risk factor <strong>for</strong> strokes. Treatment is aimedat ventricular rate control, cardioversion, recurrenceprevention and anticoagulation. Catheter ablation isindicated in symptomatic individuals who are resistantto, or intolerant of, medical therapy.With AF a major decision is whether to control rate26


Cardiologyor alter the rhythm:• Surprisingly, rhythm control does not reduce therisk of stroke (indeed paroxysmal AF carries thesame stroke risk as chronic AF) and there<strong>for</strong>edoes not affect the indications <strong>for</strong>anticoagulation• Cardioversions, multiple drugs and ablations areall used to alter rhythm• In asymptomatic individuals rate control isrecommendedAssociations with atrial ¢brillation• Ischaemic heart disease• Pericarditis• Mitral valve disease• Pulmonary embolus• Hypertension• Atrial myxomas• Thyroid disease• LVH• Acute alcohol excess/chronic alcoholiccardiomyopathy• ASD• Post-coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)• Caffeine excess• Dilated left atrium (.4.5 cm)• Pneumonia• WPW syndrome• Bronchial malignancy• Risk factors <strong>for</strong> stroke with non-valvular AF• Previous history of cerebrovascularaccident or transient ischaemic attack(risk 322.5)• Diabetes (31.7)• Hypertension (31.6)• Heart failure• Risk factors <strong>for</strong> recurrence of AF aftercardioversion• Long duration (.1–3 years)• Rheumatic mitral valve disease• Left atrium size .5.5 cm• Older age (.75 years)• Left ventricular impairmentThe CHADS 2 score can be used <strong>for</strong> stratifyingthromboembolic risk in AF:• 1 point is awarded <strong>for</strong> each of: congestiveheart failure, hypertension, age over 75,diabetes• 2 points are awarded <strong>for</strong> systemic emboli• A score of 3 indicates a high risk ofthrombus <strong>for</strong>mation and is a strongindication <strong>for</strong> anticoagulation• Scores of 1 and 2 are intermediate values(anticoagulation is given at the discretion ofthe physician)• The score has the virtue of simplicity but isquite conservative, probablyunderestimating the risk associated withprior stroke/transient ischaemic attackThe overall risk of systemic emboli is 5%–7%annually (higher with rheumatic valve disease); thisfalls to 1.6% with anticoagulation. Transoesophagealechocardiography (TOE) may exclude atrialappendage thrombus but cannot predict thedevelopment of a thrombus in the early stages postcardioversion;anticoagulation is there<strong>for</strong>e alwaysrecommended post-cardioversion.1.5.4 Ventricular arrhythmias andchannelopathiesVentricular tachycardia (monomorphic)Ventricular tachycardia (VT) has a poor prognosiswhen left ventricular function is impaired. After theexclusion of reversible causes such patients may27


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>need implantable defibrillators and anti-arrhythmictherapy.• Ventricular rate is usually 120–260 beats/min• Patients should be DC cardioverted when thereis haemodynamic compromise; overdrivepacing may also terminate VT• Amiodarone, sotalol, flecainide and lidocainemay be therapeutic adjuncts or prophylacticagents; magnesium may also be usefulAssociations of ventricular tachycardia• Myocardial ischaemia• Hypokalaemia or severe hyperkalaemia• Long QT syndrome (see below)• Digoxin toxicity (VT may arise from eitherventricle, especially with associatedhypokalaemia)• Cardiomyopathies• Congenital abnormalities of the rightventricular outflow tract (VT with LBBB andright axis deviation pattern)Features favouring ventricular tachycardia inbroad-complex tachycardiaIt is often difficult to distinguish VT from SVT withaberration (disordered ventricular propagation of asupraventricular impulse); VT remains the mostcommon cause of a broad-complex tachycardia,especially with a previous history of MI. The followingECG observations favour VT:• Capture beats: intermittent SA node complexestransmitted to ventricle• Fusion beats: combination QRS from SA nodeand VT focus meeting and fusing (causescannon waves)• RBBB with left axis deviation• Very wide QRS .140 ms• Altered QRS compared to sinus rhythm• V lead concordance with all QRS vectors,positive or negative• Dissociated P waves: marching through the VT• History of ischaemic heart disease: very goodpredictor• Variable S1• Heart rate ,170 beats/min with no effect ofcarotid sinus massageNote: none of the above has as high a positivepredictive value <strong>for</strong> VT diagnosis as a history ofstructural heart disease (especially MI).Ventricular tachycardia (polymorphic) ^torsades de pointesAnti-arrhythmic agents (particularly class III) maypredispose to torsades as the arrhythmia is ofteninitiated during bradycardia. The VT is polymorphic(QRS complexes of different amplitudes twistaround the isoelectric line), with QT prolongationwhen the patient is in sinus rhythm.• Intravenous magnesium and K þ channelopeners may control the arrhythmia, whereasisoprenaline and temporary pacing may preventbradycardia and hence the predisposition to VT• May be due to QT prolongation of any cause(see later)Proarrhythmic channelopathiesAbnormally prolonged QT intervals may be familialor acquired, and are associated with syncope andsudden death, due to ventricular tachycardia (especiallytorsades de pointes). Mortality in the untreatedsymptomatic patient with a congenitalabnormality is high but some patients may reachthe age of 50–60 years despite repeated attacks.Causes and associations are shown below.28


CardiologyProarrhythmic causes of abnormalrepolarisation (ST-T changes)• Familial• Long QT syndromes 1–5• Brugada syndrome• Short QT syndrome• Arrhythmogenic right ventriculardysplasia• Drugs• Quinidine• Erythromycin• Amiodarone• Tricyclic antidepressants• Phenothiazines• Probucol• Non-sedating antihistamines(eg terfenadine)• Ischaemic heart disease• Metabolic• Hypocalcaemia• Hypothyroidism• Hypothermia• Hypokalaemia• Rheumatic carditisLong QT syndromes: The corrected QT is .540 ms(normal ¼ 380–460 ms). Ninety per cent are familial,with chromosome 11 defects being common(Romano–Ward syndrome has autosomal dominantinheritance; Jervell–Lange-Nielsen syndrome isautosomal recessive and associated with congenitaldeafness). Arrhythmias may be reduced by a combinationof â-blockers and pacing.Cardiac causes of electromechanicaldissociationWhen faced with a cardiac arrest situation it isimportant to appreciate the list of causes of electromechanicaldissociation (EMD):• Hypoxia• Hypovolaemia• Hypokalaemia/hyperkalaemia• Hypothermia• Tension pneumothorax• Tamponade• Toxic/therapeutic disturbance• Thromboembolic/mechanical obstruction1.5.5 Pacing and ablation proceduresTemporary pacingThe ECG will show LBBB morphology (unless thereis septal per<strong>for</strong>ation, when it is RBBB). Pacing maybe ventricular (right ventricle apex) or AV (atrialappendage and right ventricle apex) <strong>for</strong> optimisedcardiac output.Complications include:• Crossing the tricuspid valve during insertion,which causes ventricular ectopics, as doesirritating the outflow tract• Atrial or right ventricular per<strong>for</strong>ation andpericardial effusion• Pneumothorax: internal jugular route ispreferable to the subclavian one, as it minimisesthis risk and also allows control after inadvertentarterial puncturesPermanent pacingMore complex permanent pacing systems includerate-responsive models, which use movement sensorsor physiological triggers (respiratory rate or QTinterval) to increase heart rates. Although moreexpensive they avoid causing pacemaker syndromeand they act more physiologically <strong>for</strong> optimal leftventricular function.29


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>• Indications <strong>for</strong> temporary pacing• Asystole• Haemodynamically compromisedbradycardia• Prophylaxis of MI complicated bysecond-degree or complete heart block• Prior to high-risk cardiac interventionsor pacemaker replacement• Prevention of some tachyarrhythmias(eg torsades)• Overdrive termination of variousarrhythmias (eg atrial flutter, VT)• Indications <strong>for</strong> permanent pacing• Chronic AV block• Sick sinus syndrome with symptoms(including chronotropic incompetence– the inability to appropriately increasethe heart rate with activity)• Post-AV nodal ablation <strong>for</strong> arrhythmias(elective or inadvertent)• Neurocardiogenic syncope• HCM• Dilated cardiomyopathy (may pacemore than two chambers)• Long QT syndrome• Prevention of atrial fibrillation• Post-cardiac transplantationPacing in heart failureThere are several synonymous terms <strong>for</strong> pacing inpatients with cardiac failure. These include ‘cardiacresynchronisation therapy’, ‘biventricular pacing’and ‘multisite pacing’. In heart failure pacing isindicated when all of the following are present:• NYHA III–IV heart failure• QRS duration .130 ms or other clear evidenceof dyssynchrony• Left ventricular ejection fraction ,35% withdilated ventricle and patient on optimal medicaltherapy (diuretics, angiotensin-convertingenzyme (ACE) inhibitors and â-blockers)The atria and right ventricle are paced in the usualfashion and in addition to this a pacing electrode isplaced in a tributary of the coronary sinus on thelateral aspect of the left ventricle. The two ventriclesare paced simultaneously or near-simultaneouslywith a short AV delay. The aim is to optimise AVdelay and reduce inter- and intraventricular asynchrony.This therapy is known to reduce mortality,to improve exercise capacity, to improve quality oflife and to reduce hospital admissions.Implantable cardioverter de¢brillators (ICD)ICDs are devices that are able to detect life-threateningtachyarrhythmias and to terminate them byoverdrive pacing or a counter-shock. They are implantedin a similar manner to permanent pacemakers.Current evidence supports their use in bothsecondary prevention of cardiac arrest and also astargeted primary prevention (eg <strong>for</strong> individuals withleft ventricular impairment and those with familialsyndromes such as arrhythmogenic right ventriculardysplasia, Brugada syndrome, long QT variants).Radiofrequency ablationRadiofrequency ablation is resistive, heat-mediated(658C) protein membrane disruption causing celllysis. Using cardiac catheterisation (with electrodesin right- or left-sided chambers) it interrupts electricalpathways in cardiac structures. Excellent resultsare obtained in the treatment of accessory pathwaysand atrial flutter, and with complete AV nodal ablationor AV node modification. Ventricular tachycardiais technically more difficult to treat (ventricularmyocardium is much thicker than atrial myocardium).Isolation of the pulmonary veins by ablation therapyis now an established technique to treat atrial fibrillation.Current cure rates are around 85%, but morethan one procedure is required in half the cases.Complete heart block and pericardial effusions arerare complications of radiofrequency ablation.Indications to refer to an electrophysiologistIndications <strong>for</strong> referral to an electrophysiologist aregiven in Table 1.5.30


CardiologyTable 1.5. Indications <strong>for</strong> referral to an electrophysiologistCondition When to refer Potential treatmentSVT More than one episode Radiofrequency ablationAtrial flutter More than one episode Radiofrequency ablationAtrial fibrillationVentricular fibrillationHighly symptomatic, refractory toor intolerant of drug therapyUnless there is an obviousreversible cause, eg ST-segmentelevation MI (STEMI)Radiofrequency ablationICDVentricular tachycardia Unless obvious reversible cause Radiofrequency ablation or ICDIschaemic cardiomyopathyNYHA class III–IV heart failure, QRS.130 ms, ejection fraction ,35%Ejection fraction ,30% onoptimal medical therapyOn optimal medical therapyPrimary prevention ICDHeart failure pacing1.6 ISCHAEMIC HEART DISEASEIn 1990 coronary artery disease became the leadingworldwide cause of death, currently claiming 7.2million lives per year.Risk factors <strong>for</strong> coronary artery disease• Primary• Hypercholesterolaemia (LDL*)• Hypertension• Smoking• Unclear• Low fibre intake• Hard water• High plasma fibrinogen levels• Raised Lp(a) levels• Raised factor VII levels• Protective factors• Exercise• Moderate amounts of alcohol• Low cholesterol diet• Increased HDL:LDL**• Secondary• Reduced HDL cholesterol• Obesity• Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus• Non-insulin-dependent diabetes• Family history of coronary artery disease• Physical inactivity• Stress and personality type• Gout and hyperuricaemia• Race (Asians)• Low weight at 1 year of age• Male sex• Chronic renal failure• Increasing age• Low social class• Increased homocystine levels andhomocystinuria*Low-density lipoprotein**Ratio of high-density lipoprotein to LDL31


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Smoking and its relationship tocardiovascular diseaseSmokers have an increased incidence of the followingcardiovascular complications:• Coronary artery disease• Malignant hypertension• Ischaemic stroke• Morbidity from peripheral vascular disease• Sudden death• Subarachnoid haemorrhage• Mortality due to aortic aneurysm• Thromboembolism in patients taking oralcontraceptivesBoth active and passive smoking increase the risk ofcoronary atherosclerosis by a number of mechanisms.These include:• Increased platelet adhesion/aggregation andwhole-blood viscosity• Increased heart rate; increased catecholaminesensitivity/release• Increased carboxyhaemoglobin level and, as aresult, increased haematocrit• Decreased HDL cholesterol and vascularcompliance• Decreased threshold <strong>for</strong> ventricular fibrillation1.6.1 AnginaOther than the usual <strong>for</strong>ms of stable and unstableangina, those worthy of specific mention include:• Decubitus: usually on lying down – due to anincrease in LVEDP or associated with dreaming,cold sheets, or coronary spasm during rapid eyemovement (REM) sleep• Variant (Prinzmetal): unpredictable, at rest, withtransient ST elevation on ECG. Due to coronaryspasm, with or without underlyingarteriosclerotic lesions• Syndrome X: this refers to a heterogeneousgroup of patients who have ST-segmentdepression on exercise testing butangiographically normal coronary arteries. Thepatients may have very-small-vessel disease and/or abnormal ventricular function. It is32commonly described in middle-aged femalesand oestrogen deficiency has been suggested tobe an aetiological factor• Vincent angina: nothing to do with cardiology;infection of the pharyngeal and tonsillar space!Causes of non-anginal chest pains• Pericardial pain• Aortic dissection• Mediastinitis• Associated with trauma, pneumothoraxor diving• Pleural• Usually with breathlessness in pleurisy,pneumonia, pneumothorax or a largeperipheral pulmonary embolus• Musculoskeletal• Gastrointestinal• Including oesophageal, gastric,gallbladder, pancreatic• Hyperventilation/anxiety• Reproduction of sharp inframammarypains on <strong>for</strong>ced hyperventilation is areliable test• Mitral valve prolapse• May be spontaneous, sharp, superficial,short-lived painSymptomatic assessment of anginaThe Canadian cardiovascular assessment of chestpain is useful <strong>for</strong> grading the severity of angina:• Grade I: angina only on strenuous or prolongedexertion• Grade II: angina climbing two flights of stairs• Grade III: angina walking one block on thelevel (indication <strong>for</strong> intervention)• Grade IV: angina at rest (indication <strong>for</strong> urgentintervention)1.6.2 Myocardial infarctionConservative estimates suggest there are 113 000myocardial infarctions per year in the UK withsignificant pre-hospital mortality, and 5%–6% inhospitalmortality and 6%–7% 30-day mortality <strong>for</strong>


Cardiologythose surviving to hospital admission. Overall 19%of UK deaths are directly attributable to coronarydisease.Diagnosis of MIAcute, evolving or recent MIEither one of the following criteria satisfies the diagnosis<strong>for</strong> an acute, evolving or recent MI:• Typical rise and gradual fall (troponin) or morerapid rise and fall (CK-MB) of biochemicalmarkers of myocardial necrosis with at least oneof the following:• Ischaemic symptoms• Development of pathological Q waves onthe ECG• ECG changes indicative of ischaemia (STsegmentelevation or depression)• Pathological finding of an acute MI (eg at postmortem)Established MIAny one of the following criteria satisfies the diagnosisof an established MI:• Development of new pathological Q waves onserial ECGs. The patient may or may notremember previous symptoms. Biochemicalmarkers of myocardial necrosis may havenormalised, depending on the length of timethat has passed since the infarct developed• Pathological finding of a healed or healing MI• Previous MI is also suggested when coronaryartery disease and a regional ventricular wallmotion abnormality are seen, or characteristicmyocardial scars are observed with MRIDistinction between ST-segment elevation MI(STEMI) and non-STEMI (NSTEMI)An acute MI should be classified as STEMI whenthere is:• ST-segment elevation (2 mm in two or morechest leads, or 1 mm in two or more limb leads)• A chronic MI with Q-wave <strong>for</strong>mation• Pathological or imaging evidence of a fullthicknessscarOther MIs that do not meet these criteria should beclassified as NSTEMI.Cardiac enzymesThe widespread use of troponin assays has bothsimplified and lowered the bar <strong>for</strong> the diagnosis ofMI. A number of markers of cardiac damage arenow available. Table 1.6 is a guide to the timing ofthe initial rise, peak and return to normality.Troponin assays in patients with renal failureThe troponin level may be elevated simply becausea patient has renal failure. In patients with renalfailure who present with chest pain it is helpful toassess the troponin level at baseline as well as at12 h after the onset of symptoms, and sometimes atlater time points. In these circumstances only arising troponin level would be suggestive of ischaemicmyocardial damage.Complications of MISince the advent of thrombolysis, complication rateshave been reduced (eg halved <strong>for</strong> pericarditis, conductiondefects, ventricular thrombus, fever, Dresslersyndrome). All complications may be seen withany type of infarction, but the following are themost common associations.• Complications of anterior infarctions• Late VT/VF• Left ventricular aneurysm• Left ventricular thrombus and systemicembolism (usually 1–3 weeks post-MI)*• Complete heart block (rare)• Ischaemic mitral regurgitation• Congestive cardiac failure• Cardiac rupture – usually at days 4–10with EMD• VSD with septal rupture• Pericarditis and pericardial effusion(Dressler syndrome with higherythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR),fever, anaemia, pleural effusions andanti-cardiac muscle antibodies is seenoccasionally)33


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Table 1.6. Guide to the timing of changes in cardiac enzymesMarkerInitialrisePeakReturn tonormal<strong>Notes</strong>Creatine phosphokinase* 4–8 h 18 h 2–3 days CPK-MB is main cardiac isoenzymeMyoglobin 1–4 h 6–7 h 24 h Low specificity from skeletal muscle damageTroponin** 3–12 h 24 h 3–10 days Troponins I and T are the most sensitive andspecific markers of myocardial damageavailableLactate dehydrogenase(LDH)10 h 24–48 h 14 days Cardiac muscle mainly contains LDH* Creatine phosphokinase has three isoenzymes, of which the CPK-MB isoenzyme is most cardiac-specific,although numerous other organs possess the enzyme in small quantities. A CPK-MB of .2.5% of the total CPK hasbeen suggested as very specific <strong>for</strong> MI in the context of chest pain. This is inaccurate in situations of significantacute or chronic skeletal injury, where CPK levels will be high** Troponin interpretation is specific to the assay used and local guidelines should be consulted. A level greaterthan the 99th centile <strong>for</strong> the assay is regarded as positive. Assays may be read only, semi-quantitative orquantitative. Positives occur in all conditions where myocardial damage occurs, including pulmonary embolus,myocarditis, extreme bradycardia or tachycardia, sepsis, renal impairment and uncontrolled diabetes mellitus• Complications of inferior infarctions• Higher re-infarction rate• Inferior aneurysm – with mitralregurgitation (rare)• Pulmonary embolism (rare)• Complete heart block and other degreesof heart block• Papillary muscle dysfunction and mitralregurgitation• Right ventricular infarcts need highfilling pressures (particularly if posteriorextension)*Although warfarin provides no general benefit, it mayreduce the overall CVA rate (1.5%–3.6%) in thosepatients with echocardiographically demonstrable muralleft ventricular thrombus after a large anterior MI, sorecommended <strong>for</strong> up to 6 months after the infarctionHeart block and pacing after myocardialinfarction• Temporary pacing is indicated in anterior MIcomplicated by complete heart block. Thispresentation is associated with high mortalitydue to the extensive myocardial damage. Thedecision as whether to temporarily pace apatient with inferior infarction and completeheart block is primarily dictated by the patient’shaemodynamic status. Atropine andisoprenaline can also be tried. Narrow-complexescape rhythms are more stable. Anobservational period of 7 days post-MI isappropriate to allow the return of sinus rhythmbe<strong>for</strong>e considering permanent pacing• The right coronary artery is the dominant vessel(over left circumflex) in 85% of patients. As thisgives off branches to SA and AV nodes, heart34


Cardiologyblock might be observed if a dominant rightcoronary artery is occluded1.6.3 Medical therapy <strong>for</strong> myocardialinfarctionThrombolysis is beneficial up to 6 h after pain onsetbut may be given <strong>for</strong> up to 12 hours in the contextof continuing pain or deteriorating condition. Recanalisationoccurs in 70% of patients after thrombolysis(compared with a 15% recanalisation ratewithout thrombolysis) and results in a higher, earliercreatine phosphokinase (CPK) rise (but a lower totalCPK release). Reperfusion arrhythmias are commonwithin the first 2 hours after thrombolysis.Primary angioplasty is superior to thrombolysis <strong>for</strong>acute MI; the same ECG criteria apply to caseselection.Tissue plasminogen activator and similar recombinantagents are accompanied by a prothromboticphase lasting about 48 hours and this period shouldbe covered with heparin.Contraindications to thrombolysisAlthough there are numerous relative contraindicationswhere the risk/benefit considerations are individualto the patient, there are several absolutecontraindications to thrombolysis.Contraindications to thrombolysis• Absolute contraindications• Active internal bleeding oruncontrollable external bleeding• Suspected aortic dissection• Recent head trauma (,2 weeks)• Intracranial neoplasms• History of proved haemorrhagic strokeor cerebral infarction ,2 months earlier• Uncontrolled high BP (.200/120mmHg)• Pregnancy• Relative contraindications• Traumatic prolonged cardiopulmonaryresuscitation• Bleeding disorders• Recent surgery• Probable intracardiac thrombus (eg AFwith mitral stenosis)• Active diabetic haemorrhagicretinopathy• Anticoagulation or INR .1.8Groups particularly benefiting from thrombolysis(determined by the GUSTO, ISIS 2 and ISIS 3 trials)include:• Those with large anterior infarction• Those with pronounced ST elevation• Elderly (.75 years)• Those with poor left ventricular function orLBBB, or systolic BP ,100 mmHg• Those who have early administration: within 1 hof pain onsetPosterior infarction (a tall R wave in V1 with STdepression in leads V1–V3): no clear benefit ofthrombolysis has been shown as few such patientshave been enrolled into major trials (ECG interpretationis often difficult when the presentation is notwith inferior infarct). However, the general consensuswould still be to give thrombolysis. Sixty percent of posterior MIs are due to right coronary arterydisease.NSTEMI: have not been shown to benefit fromthrombolysis. They have a low in-patient but high(65%) untreated 1-year mortality (compared to 34%<strong>for</strong> STEMI infarcts) and they should be investigatedearly and aggressively.There is now a good evidence base <strong>for</strong> a range ofpharmacological treatments in patients presentingwith acute coronary syndromes (See Table 1.7).These are aimed at dispersing clot (aspirin, clopidogrel,heparin), preventing arrhythmias (â-blockers),stabilising plaque (statins) and preventing adverseremodelling.35


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Table 1.7. Summary of clinical trials in patients with acute MI*Agents used <strong>for</strong> acute MIMortality intreated group (%)Mortality incontrol subjects(%)Number treatedto save 1 lifeTrials involvedAspirin 9.4 (at 5 weeks) 11.8 42 ISIS 2Clopidogrel 11.4 9.3 CompositeendpointCUREThrombolytics 10.7 † (at 21 days) 13.0 † 43 † GISSI 1 † , ISIS 2,TIMI II, GUSTOâ-Blockers 3.9 (at 7 days) 4.6 143 ISIS 1ACE inhibitors 35.2 † (after 39-month meanfollow-up)39.7 † 22 † SAVE, SOLVD † , AIRELipid-lowering therapy(patients with averagecholesterol)Heparin with aspirin andany <strong>for</strong>m of thrombolysis10.2 (after 5 years) 13.2 33 CARE (note endpointsincluded second nonfatalMI and cardiacdeaths)8.6 9.1 200 Meta-analysis of68 000 patientsMagnesium: contradictory data but no mortality reduction LIMIT 1, 2, ISIS 4Nitrates: no clear benefit ISIS 4, GISSI 3Warfarin: no proved benefit above aspirin after thrombolysis* See also Appendix II: Summary of further trials in cardiology† Data from that particular trial36


Cardiology1.6.4 Coronary artery interventionalproceduresPercutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)After coronary angioplasty the recurrence or restenosisrate is 30% within 3 months and 40%–60% <strong>for</strong> total occlusions that are successfullydilated as treatment of acute MI. These figures havebeen greatly reduced, first by bare metal stents andthen further by drug-eluting stents. Drug-elutingstents are covered by an antimitotic agent to preventsmooth muscle/fibrous tissue proliferation. Un<strong>for</strong>tunately,they also inhibit endothelialisation so increasingthe risk of thrombosis and so dualantiplatelet therapy (aspirin and clopidogrel) is mandatory<strong>for</strong> 12 months after the intervention andlifelong single antiplatelet therapy is required thereafter.• Lesions particularly amenable to PCI includethose that are discrete, proximal, non-calcified,unoccluded, that are away from side branchesand that occur in patients with a short history ofangina. While there is a small acute occlusionrate, these can usually be managed successfullywith intra-coronary stenting, such that the need<strong>for</strong> emergency CABG has fallen to under 1%• More challenging lesions include those withingrafts, at bifurcations, calcified or long lesionsand those within small vessels. Diabetics havepoorer outcomes compared with non-diabetics• Almost any lesion can be stented including leftmain stem disease, three-vessel disease andeven chronic total occlusions but carefulevaluation and discussion with the patient arenecessary, as in many situations bypass graftinghas a better evidence baseCoronary artery bypass grafting (CABG)CABG has clear benefits in specific groups of patientswith chronic coronary artery disease (whencompared with medical therapy alone). Analysis haspreviously been limited because randomised trialsincluded small numbers and were per<strong>for</strong>med severaldecades ago; patients studied were usuallymales aged ,65 years. The population now receivingCABG has changed, but so has medical therapy.• Prognostic benefits are shown <strong>for</strong> symptomatic,significant left main stem disease (Veterans’Study), symptomatic proximal three-vesseldisease and in two-vessel disease whichincludes the proximal left anterior descendingartery (CASS data)• Patients with moderately impaired leftventricular function show greater benefit, butthose with poor left ventricular function havegreater operative mortality. Overall mortality is,2%, rising to between 5% and 10% <strong>for</strong> asecond procedure. Eighty per cent of patientsgain symptom relief• Peri-operative graft occlusion is around 10% <strong>for</strong>vein grafts, which otherwise last 8–10 years.Arterial grafts (internal mammary, free radial,gastro-epiploic) have a higher initial patencyrate but long-term outcomes are disappointingwith the exception of internal mammary grafts,which are clearly superior to vein grafts• A ‘Dressler-like’ syndrome may occur up to6 months post-surgery• Minimally invasive CABG involves theredirection of internal mammary arteries tocoronary vessels without the need <strong>for</strong> cardiacbypass and full sternotomy incisions (oftentermed ‘off pump’ coronary revascularisation).Recovery times following this procedure areshorter than <strong>for</strong> conventional surgery but theprocedures are technically more challengingPost-MI rehabilitationAfter MI patients are kept in hospital <strong>for</strong> 5 days,should take 2 months off work and have 1 month’sabstinence from sexual intercourse and driving (seefollowing text). Cardiac rehabilitation is particularlyimportant <strong>for</strong> patient confidence. Depression occursin 30% of patients. Patients who are fully revascularisedor invasively investigated and found to haveno ongoing ischaemic focus may be dischargedafter 3 days and be rehabilitated more rapidly.Fitness to driveThe DVLA provides extensive guidelines <strong>for</strong> coronarydisease and interventions. Their website(www.dvla.gov.uk) should be consulted, especially37


<strong>Essential</strong> <strong>Revision</strong> <strong>Notes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>MRCP</strong>Table 1.8. Fitness to driveCondition Driving restriction <strong>Notes</strong>Unexplained syncope6 months from lastepisode or until effectivetreatment is givenClear vasovagal events that occur onlywhen the patient is erect do not precludedrivingCardiac catheter procedure (includingangiography, percutaneous coronaryintervention, electrophysiologicalstudies/ablation)Myocardial infarction1 week Should be able to per<strong>for</strong>m emergency stopunhindered1 monthPermanent pacemaker 1 month Only 1 week if the patient has never beensyncopalProphylactic ICD 1 month No clinical arrhythmia or syncopeSecondary prevention ICD 6 months DVLA must be in<strong>for</strong>medICD shock therapy 6 months Unless an inappropriate shock ispreventable by reprogramming orintervention, eg a change in the detectionor therapy programming to avoid shocks<strong>for</strong> sinus tachycardia or atrial arrhythmiaswith regard to class 2 licences (<strong>for</strong> vehicles over3500 kg, minibuses and buses) but the essentialpoints are given in Table 1.8.1.7 OTHER MYOCARDIAL DISEASES1.7.1 Cardiac failureCardiac failure can be defined as the pumpingaction of the heart being insufficient to meet thecirculatory demands of the body (in the absence ofmechanical obstructions). A broad echocardiographicdefinition is of an ejection fraction (EF),40% (as in the SAVE trial, which enrolled patients<strong>for</strong> ACE inhibitors post-MI). Overall 5-year survivalis 65% with EF ,40%, compared to 95% in thosewith EF .50%.The most common single cause of cardiac failure inthe Western world is ischaemic heart disease (IHD).• Hypertension is also a very frequent cause –either acting alone or in combination with IHD• Diastolic heart failure is increasingly recognisedalthough difficult to diagnose as an isolatedcondition. It describes impaired ventricularfilling that elevates pulmonary and/or systemicvenous pressure with activation of theneurohormonal system as seen in systolic heartfailure• All patients with systolic heart failure have adegree of diastolic dysfunction – some believethat isolated diastolic dysfunction may be anearly step prior to development of systolic heartfailureEF is only a guide to cardiac function, which alsodepends on other factors including pre-load, after-38

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