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CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

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Page 1: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease LabSeptember 19, 2011

Page 2: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 1

Page 3: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 1

• A 75 year-old man presents with exertional angina, syncope, and dyspnea.

• The patient also admits to having occasional spells of lightheadedness and fainting on exercise

• On physical examination: – Systolic ejection murmur to right of

sternum radiating to the neck– Weak and delayed carotid pulses

Page 4: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

• A chest x-ray shows calcifications of aortic valve leaflets and an enlarged cardiac shadow

• The patient does not have any evidence of significant coronary artery disease on angiogram.

Page 5: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

What do you think is the most likely diagnosis?

Page 6: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

In a 75 year-old man, what is the most likely etiology of the valvular disease

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The patient underwent surgery for aortic valve replacement

The excised valve is shown in image 1B

Image 1A shows a normal aortic valve.

Page 8: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

1A

1B

Image 1A, 1B

Page 9: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

In a 50 year-old man with similar symptoms and with no evidence of significant coronary artery disease, what would the most likely diagnosis

be?

Page 10: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 1C

Page 11: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 1D

Page 12: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

In a 25 year old-man with similar symptoms, what would be the most likely cause of the

disease?

Page 13: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 1E

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Image 1F

Page 15: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 2• A 25 year old white-male presents to his cardiologist with

complaints of pounding of the heart and angina.• There is no family history of coronary artery disease• The patient denies smoking or drinking and claims to have

had no major illnesses in the past• On physical examination the patient has a bounding pulse,

large in volume and a wide pulse pressure and a diastolic murmur.

• His systolic blood pressure is high and diastolic blood pressure low

• Chest X-ray shows an enlarged left ventricle and dilated ascending aorta.

Page 16: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Why would this patient have a bounding pulse? What is the most likely diagnosis?

Page 17: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

On additional questioning the patient mentioned that his older brother died of aortic dissection at the age of 30 years.

Why is this relevant?

A CT angiogram of this patient is shown in image 2A and 2B

Page 18: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

2A2B

Page 19: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The next two slides(2C, 2D) demonstrate the pathology in this patient.

Page 20: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 2C

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Image 2D

Page 22: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 3

• A 34-year-old white female is admitted to the hospital with progressively increasing dyspnea and orthopnea

• The patient denies any prior cardiovascular disease, but on additional questioning she reveals that she had rheumatic fever as a child

Page 23: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

• On physical examination, the patient has elevated JVP, mid-diastolic murmur

• ECG: Left atrial hypertrophy and atrial fibrillation

• Chest X-ray (Image 3A) shows interstitial and alveolar densities

Page 24: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 3A

Page 25: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The patient underwent mitral valve replacement

Excised valve is shown in image 3B

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Image 3B

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• Image 3C is from another patient with similar history who underwent aortic valve replacement.

• Please describe the gross features.

Page 28: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 3C

Page 29: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Images 3D, 3E, 3F & 3G are autopsy images from another patient with

similar clinical history

Page 30: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 3D

Page 31: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Thrombus

Image 3E

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Image 3F

Image 3G

Page 33: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 4

Page 34: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

• A 50 year-old with a history of rheumatic fever in childhood presents to the emergency with fever for 10 days

• She has had dyspnea on exertion for the past two years, but says that the dyspnea has become worse since the onset of fever

• On physical examination splinter hemorrhages were seen in his finger nails as shown in image 4A

CASE 4

Page 35: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 4A

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Blood cultures were positive for staphylococcus aureus

What is the most likely etiology of this patient’s fever and dyspnea?

A mitral valve replacement was performed. The next image is from the

mitral valve from an autopsy patient with similar findings

Page 37: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 4B

Page 38: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 4C

Page 39: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 4D

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Case 5

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• A 50 year-old-man died of bleeding complications following surgery for adenocarcinoma of the pancreas

• He was diagnosed with disseminated intravascular coagulation shortly before his death

• An autopsy was performed – The heart showed vegetations on his mitral valve and

aortic valve– Blood cultures were negative for microorganisms

Page 42: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 5A

Page 43: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011
Page 44: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Libman-Sacks Disease

-- Seen in patients with SLE

– No predilection for lines of closure

– Circulating antiphospholipid antibodies

Page 45: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Libman-Sacks Disease

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Rheumatic valvulitis

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Rheumatic valvulitis LSENBTEInfective endocarditis

Page 48: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 6

Page 49: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 6

• A 50 year-old man with known mitral regurgitation due to myxomatous degeneration presents in the ER with acute shortness of breath

• There is no fever. • A coronary angiogram performed 2 months prior did

not show any evidence of coronary artery disease. • Prior echo showed normal left ventricle and an

enlarged left atrium

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What are the diagnostic possibilities in this patient?

Page 51: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The patient underwent emergent mitral valve replacement.

Page 52: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The gross and microscopic features of the excised mitral valve are shown in

kodachrome 6A and 6B.

What is your diagnosis?

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Image 6A

Page 54: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 6B

Page 55: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

In a patient with history of coronary artery disease the probable cause of acute mitral regurgitation is shown in the next kodachrome (6C)

What is your diagnosis?

Page 56: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 6C

Page 57: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 7

Page 58: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 7

• A 35 year-old-man presents with complaints of flushing, cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and wheezing.

• On physical examination: patient has increased jugular venous pressure, hepatomegaly, ascites and bilateral lower leg edema.

Page 59: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The patient underwent right tricuspid valve replacement.

Image 7B is from an autopsy heart of another patient with similar history.

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Image 7B

Page 61: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 8

Page 62: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Case 8• A 40 year old man underwent mitral valve

replacement for mitral stenosis. • A year later the patient presented to the emergency

department with an acute surgical abdomen. • On examination the patient had generalized

peritonitis. • On urgent laparotomy a ruptured spleen was found.

The spleen was infarcted at the site of rupture. • An echo was performed.

Page 63: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The patient subsequently underwent a redo heart valve replacement

The pathologic abnormality of the valve is shown in image 8A which is from an autopsy

heart

Page 64: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 8A

Page 65: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

• Another 40 year-old-man underwent mitral valve replacement for mitral stenosis.

• Four years later he developed mitral regurgitation.

Page 66: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

The valve was excised and is shown in image 8B.

What is the possible etiology?

Page 67: CV 3: Valvular Heart Disease Lab September 19, 2011

Image 8B