Cardiology

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Electrocardiogram

  • sinus or not sinus? (look at P waves in II and V1)
  • rate is 300 / number of large boxes between R waves, or the number of complexes on a rhythm strip x 6
  • QRS narrow or wide?
  • axis, look for isoelectric lead
  • PR interval
  • QTc interval
  • Signs of MI: T wave morphology? ST elevations/depressions? Pathologic Q waves? R wave progression? LBBB?
  • Signs of Heart Failure: P wave morphology? LVH?

Cardiac Physical Exam

Arrhythmias

SA node -> AV node -> bundle of His -> left/right bundles -> Purkinje fibers

Congestive Heart Failure

  • Systolic Dysfunction/HFrEF
    • H&P: History of CAD, hypertension, valvular disease, dilated cardiomyopathy (EtOH, Chagas, Coxsackie B), or MI. Dyspnea, PND, orthopnea, cough, hemoptysis, fatigue; S3, displaced PMI, crackles, signs of right heart failure (S4, JVD, edema)
    • Dx: LVEF < 40%, enlarged cardiomediastinal silhouette on CXR, elevated BNP
    • Tx: ACEI/ARBs, ARNIs, β blockers, SGLT2 inhibitors, Spironolactone, and LVAD all have mortality benefit; Digoxin and diuretics don't have any mortality benefit but help with symptoms and decrease hospitalizations. For acute exacerbations use LMNOP (lasix, morphine, nitrates, oxygen, positioning).
  • Non-systolic Dysfunction/HFpEF
    • H&P: History of amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, hemochromatosis, or radiation leading to infiltrative or restrictive cardiomyopathy.
    • Dx: LVEF > 40%
    • Tx: SGLT2 inhibitors

Cardiomyopathy

  • Dilated Cardiomyopathy
  • Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
  • Restrictive Cardiomyopathy

Coronary Artery Disease

  • Angina Pectoris
    • H&P: History of atherosclerosis, HCL, HLD, HTN, Diabetes.
    • Dx: Chest pain that is brought on by exertion, relieved by rest or nitrates. Differential includes GERD, esophageal spasm, costochondritis, pericarditis, aortic dissection, PUD, pancreatitis, shingles
    • Tx: sublingual nitroglycerin, GTN
  • Prinzmetal Angina
    • H&P: Similar to angina, but occurs mostly in young women and at rest, not with exertion, most often in the morning.

Acute Coronary Syndromes

  • Unstable Angina/NSTEMI
  • STEMI

Dyslipidemia

Group Intervention
21+ w/ ASCVD or LDL > 190 High dose statin
40+ w/ LDL 70-189 w/o diabetes Calculate 10-yr ASCVD risk:
  • > 7.5% give high dose statin
  • 5-7.5% give moderate dose statin
  • < 5% no statin
40+ w/ LDL 70-189 w/ diabetes Calculate 10-yr ASCVD risk:
  • > 7.5% give high dose statin
  • < 7.5% give moderate dose statin

Essential Hypertension

  • Primary/Essential Hypertension (95% of cases)
    • Dx: Rule out secondary causes, BP > 130/90 on three separate occasions.
    • DDx: Secondary HTN (5% of cases; suspect if patient very young, very old, very high BP, or refractory to treatment)
    • Tx: For SBP 121-130, start with 8-12 weeks lifestyle modifications and reassess. If SBP 131-139 or DBP 81-89, risk stratify based on 10-yr ASCVD risk, if > 10%, start medication, if < 10%, can do trial of lifestyle modifications. When starting medication, start with 1 or 2 agents depending on severity, reassess efficacy every month and up the dose or add another agent as needed. ACEI/ARB (good for kidney protection, don't do both), Dihydropyridine CCB (better for HTN) > non-dihydropyridine CCB (better for rate control), Beta Blockers (cardiac selective (MAN BABES) > non-selective), Thiazide-Like Diuretics > Thiazide-Type Diuretics. For most patients, the combination of ACEI/ARB + CCB is the best, so start with one of these two classes so that the second can be added later for synergy. Special population considerations: CHF (avoid CCBs, use beta blockers, ACEI/ARBs, spironolactone), CKD (use ACEI/ARB), Pregnancy (hydralazine, labetalol, nicardipine, methyldopa), post-MI (use beta blockers + ACEI/ARB), Blacks (CCB + thiazide-like diuretic), Cocaine (don't give beta blockers due to unopposed alpha).
  • Hypertensive Urgency BP > 180 + mild symptoms
  • Hypertensive Emergency BP > 180 + ominous symptoms

Pericardial Disease

  • Pericarditis improved when leaning forward, can show calcifications on CXR, pleuritic chest pain, possible history of MI
  • Cardiac Tamponade (Beck's triad), get TTE to look for pericardial effusion, urgent pericardiocentesis if present.

Valvular Heart Disease

Cardiac Murmur Descriptions and Maneuvers
Murmur Description Location Provocative Maneuvers
AR Diastolic Mitral Example
AS Systolic Aortic Example
MR Systolic Aortic Example
MS Diastolic, Blowing Mitral Example
MP Systolic, Click Aortic Example
TR Systolic Tricuspid Example
PDA Continuous, Machine-like ? Example
  • Maneuvers increase afterload (hand grip, standing), preload (passive leg raise, lying down), or both (vagal).
  • Endocarditis: Janeway lesions, Osler nodes, Splinter hemorrhages

Vascular Diseases

  • Aortic Aneurism: Most are abdominal, most are below the renal arteries. Different types of repair (open vs endovascular), when to intervene (> 5.5 cm, rapidly enlarging, or causing organ damage), one time screening abdominal US recommended in ever smokers ages 65-75.
  • Aortic Dissection: Stanford classification: type B (post left subclavian and descending aorta) is medically managed; type A (ascending aorta to the left subclavian or beyond) is a surgical emergency.
  • Deep Venous Thrombosis: Virchow's triad, mostly occur in the legs, DVTs leading to PEs are usually in the femoral veins. Hofman's sign is neither sensitive or specific. Risk stratify based on Well's score, then get D-dimer (sensitive, not specific) if pre-test probability is low to rule out DVT. Can give therapeutic dose heparin if pre-test probability is high.
  • Peripheral Arterial Disease: ABI
  • Lymphedema
    • In developed countries, is usually secondary to lymph node resection (e.g. radical mastectomy)
    • Can also be congenital or secondary to infection (developing countries)
    • Does not respond to diuretics
    • Use compression stockings or arm bands

Syncope

  • Ddx includes cardiac arrhythmias, vasovagal, seizures, orthostatic hypotension, SAH, vertigo, symptomatic anemia