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Cardiac Pathology 3: Valvular Heart Disease, Cardiomyopathies and Other Stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D.

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Presentation on theme: "Cardiac Pathology 3: Valvular Heart Disease, Cardiomyopathies and Other Stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cardiac Pathology 3: Valvular Heart Disease, Cardiomyopathies and Other Stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D.

2 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart II Cardiac Pathology Outline

3 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart Failure Congenital Heart Disease Ischemic Heart Disease Hypertensive Heart Disease Cardiac Pathology Outline

4 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart II Valvular Heart Disease Cardiomyopathies Pericardial Disease Tumors Cardiac Pathology Outline

5 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart II Valvular Heart Disease Cardiac Pathology Outline

6 Stenosis and/or insufficiency Stenosis: failure to open Insufficiency: failure to close Murmurs Outcome depends on severity and speed of development Valvular Heart Disease

7 Part of aging process Can occur on normal or congenitally bicuspid valves Results in increased LV pressure, LV hypertrophy, and relative ischemia Angina, CHF, or fainting Calcific Aortic Stenosis

8 Calcific aortic stenosis: normal (L) and bicuspid (R) valves

9 Common (5% of adults in US, F>M) Ballooning of mitral leaflets Myxoid/mucoid change within leaflet Pathogenesis unknown Most patients asymptomatic Mitral Valve Prolapse

10 Mitral valve prolapse

11 Rheumatic fever: systemic inflammatory disease occurring a few weeks after strep throat Valves (esp. mitral) become scarred Consequence: stenosis (± regurgitation) Rheumatic Valvular Disease

12 Body makes antibody to strep bug that cross- reacts with antigens in heart and joints 2-3 weeks after strep throat, patient gets: migratory polyarthritis pericardial friction rub, arrhythmias Chronic disease can reappear decades later mitral stenosis, left atrial enlargement, thrombi increased risk of infective endocarditis Long term prognosis variable Rheumatic Fever

13 vegetationsAschoff bodypericarditis Strep throat Antibody production Antibody cross-reaction with heart

14 Mitral stenosis with commissural fusion

15 Microbial invasion of heart valves, endocardium Acute endocarditis highly virulent bug attacks normal valve half of patients dead within days to weeks Subacute endocarditis low virulence bug colonizes abnormal valve slow onset, long course, most recover Symptoms: fever, flu-like symptoms Complications: septicemia, arrhythmias, renal failure, systemic emboli Infective Endocarditis

16 Infective endocarditis: vegetations on valve

17 Infective endocarditis: splinter hemorrhage of nail bed

18 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart II Valvular Heart Disease Cardiomyopathies Cardiac Pathology Outline

19 Diverse group of disorders in which there is intrinsic myocardial dysfunction Lots of causes; some idiopathic Three groups dilated cardiomyopathy hypertrophic cardiomyopathy restrictive cardiomyopathy Cardiomyopathies

20 Heart dilates, enlarges, and can ’ t contract well Causes viral alcohol/toxin genetic abnormalities peripartum Slowly progressing CHF 70% of patients dead within 5 years Dilated Cardiomyopathy

21 Dilated (L) and hypertrophic (R) cardiomyopathy

22 Massively hypertrophied L ventricle can ’ t fill Cause: mutation in a sarcomere protein gene Symptoms: atrial fibrillation, CHF, arrhythmia, sudden death Treatment: drugs to promote ventricular relaxation or surgical excision of part of septum Prognosis: about 4% of patients die each year Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

23 Sarcomere of cardiac muscle

24 Heart wall is stiff; can ’ t fill during diastole Cause: Idiopathic or secondary to systemic disease (amyloidosis, hemochromatosis, sarcoidosis) Symptoms: shortness of breath, peripheral edema Treatment: not often helpful 70% of patients dead within 5 years Restrictive Cardiomyopathy

25 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart II Valvular Heart Disease Cardiomyopathies Pericardial Disease Cardiac Pathology Outline

26 Pericarditis secondary (MI, radiation, pneumonia) or primary (infectious) atypical chest pain dangers: tamponade, chronic fibrosis Pericardial effusion serous (CHF), serosanguinous (aortic dissection), chylous (lymphatic obstruction) outcome depends on stretchiness of pericardial sac slow = asymptomatic; sudden = catastrophic Pericardial Disease

27 Acute pericarditis

28 Blood Vessels Heart I Heart II Valvular Heart Disease Cardiomyopathies Pericardial Disease Tumors Cardiac Pathology Outline

29 Most common: metastatic heart is a rare site of metastasis lung cancer, lymphoma most common Primary tumors uncommon most are benign most common: myxoma Cardiac Tumors

30 Cardiac myxoma


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