Title: Cardiovascular Board Review I
1Cardiovascular Board Review I
- Sohan Parekh, MD
- Department of Emergency Medicine
- Mount Sinai School of Medicine
2Question 1
- A 40 yo M, previous healthy presents with cough,
low-grade fever, and myalgias for 3-4 days.
Today he has experienced severe, sharp pleuritic
chest pain radiation to the left shoulder that is
worse when he is supine. He smokes one pack of
cigarettes per day. Vitals signs BP 160/95, P
110, RR 18, T 37.2 oC. A 12-lead EKG is obtained
PEER VII Q55
3Q1 EKG
4Q1 (continued)
- Appropriate next steps include
- ASA 325 mg, Morphine 2 mg, admit CCU
- ASA 325 mg, NTG, 0.4 mg SL x 3, heparin 4000 unit
bolus, activate cath team - Ketorolac 30 mg IV then ibuprofen 800 mg TID for
1 week as an outpatient - Lidocaine 75 mg bolus then 2 mg/min infusion,
labetalol 20 mg IV, admit to telemetry - Metoprolol 5 mg IV, NTG IV infusion titrated to
pain, and cardiology consult
5Q1 Answer
- Appropriate next steps include
- ASA 325 mg, Morphine 2 mg, admit CCU
- ASA 325 mg, NTG, 0.4 mg SL x 3, heparin 4000 unit
bolus, activate cath team - Ketorolac 30 mg IV then ibuprofen 800 mg TID for
1 week as an outpatient - Lidocaine 75 mg bolus then 2 mg/min infusion,
labetalol 20 mg IV, admit to telemetry - Metoprolol 5 mg IV, NTG IV infusion titrated to
pain, and cardiology consult
6Acute Pericarditis
- Inflammation of the pericardium
- Sharp or stabbing chest pain with radiation to
back, neck, left shoulder, or arm - Worsened on inspiration or lying supine
- EKG
- Acute phase Diffuse ST elevations (most
prominent in I, V5, V6) with PR depressions (II,
aVF, V4-V6) - Isolated pericarditis will not make enzymes or
have dysrhythmias - Dispo for uncomplicated is NSAIDs for 1-3 weeks
and D/C
7Acute Pericarditis
http//urbanhealth.udmercy.edu/ekg/pdf/acuteperica
rditis.pdf
8Question 2
- A 50 yo M presents with an acute inferior wall
MI. Following the administration of ASA and NTG,
he suddenly becomes confused and diaphoretic with
a BP of 70/30. Physical exam reveals JVD, clear
lungs, and no evidence of a murmur.
Promes 3-9
9Q2 (continued)
- What combination of therapeutic agents is most
- likely to immediately stabilize this patient?
- Heparin and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors
- Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor and
clopidogrel - Steptokinase and magnesium
- Normal saline bolus and dobutamine
10Q2 Answer
- What combination of therapeutic agents is most
- likely to immediately stabilize this patient?
- Heparin and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors
- Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor and
clopidogrel - Steptokinase and magnesium
- Normal saline bolus and dobutamine
11Right Ventricular Infact
- Complicates up to 1/3 of inferior wall MIs
- EKG
- ST Elevations in II, III, aVF
- Reciprocal depressions in I, aVL, V5, V6
- ST Elevations in V4R to V6R on right-sided EKG
- Prone to hypotension but respond to volume and
pressors / inotropes - PCI preferred over thrombolytics
- This is the classic question for RV infact
12Right Ventricular Infact
- Left Sided EKG
- Right Sided EKG
http//ccn.aacnjournals.org/cgi/reprint/25/2/52.pd
f
13Question 3
- The hypertensive emergency that is most easily
reversible with pharmaceutical management is
PEER VII Q240
14Q3 (continued)
- Acute coronary syndrome
- Aortic dissection
- Eclampsia / pre-eclampsia
- Encephalopathy
- Intracranial hemorrhage
15Q3 Answer
- Acute coronary syndrome
- Aortic dissection
- Eclampsia / pre-eclampsia
- Encephalopathy
- Intracranial hemorrhage
16Hypertensive Emergency
- Marked elevation of BP with end-organ dysfunction
? otherwise HTN urgency - Susceptible end-organs CV, brain, kidney
- Encephalopathy
- N/V
- Severe Headache
- Confusion ? decreased sensorium ? coma
- Rapid 25 decrease in BP is the goal
17Hypertensive Emergency
- Rare disease, many treatment options
- Precipitating causes drugs, pregnancy
- Peds
- Pheochromocytoma
- Aortic coarctation
- Renovascular disease
- Only emergencies require immediate treatment.
Urgencies can be discharged
18Question 4
- A 75 yo F presents with decreased level of
consciousness. VS are BP 70/40, P 40, RR 12, and
T 36.5 oC. Blood glucose is 114. The rhythm
strip should be interpreted as
PEER VII Q92
19Q4 (continued)
- Complete Heart Block
- Mobitz second-degree HB, type I (Wenckebach)
- Mobitz second-degree HB, type II
- QT prolongation with U waves
- Sinus bradycardia
20Q4 Answer
- Complete Heart Block
- Mobitz second-degree HB, type I (Wenckebach)
- Mobitz second-degree HB, type II
- QT prolongation with U waves
- Sinus bradycardia
21AV Nodal Blocks
- Caused by conduction delay in AV node
- First-Degree
- PR interval gt 0.2s (200ms)
- All P waves followed by QRS
- No intervention required
http//urbanhealth.udmercy.edu/ekg/pdf/AVBlocks.pd
f
22AV Nodal Blocks
- Second-Degree Mobitz I (Wenckebach)
- Progressive lengthening of PR interval followed
by dropped beat - Seen in MI, digoxin toxicity, myocarditis, CAD
- Stable rhythm
http//urbanhealth.udmercy.edu/ekg/pdf/AVBlocks.pd
f
23AV Nodal Blocks
- Second-Degree Mobitz Type II
- Fixed-length PR interval with one or more
non-conducted beats - Signifies major damage to conduction system
- Unstable Requires permanent pacemaker
24AV Nodal Blocks
- Third-Degree (Complete) Heart Block
- No P waves are conducted through AV node
- Junctional or Ventricular escape paces the heart
- Unstable Requires permanent pacemaker
http//urbanhealth.udmercy.edu/ekg/pdf/AVBlocks.pd
f
25Question 5
- The most appropriate initial therapy for a
patient with a pulse of 40, a BP of 70/40, and
the previous EKG is
PEER VII Q93
26Q5 (continued)
- Atropine 1 mg IV
- External cardiac pacemaker
- Isoproterenol infusion at 2 mcg/min, titrate up
- Normal saline
- Potassium infusion at 10 mEq/hr
27Q5 Answer
- Atropine 1 mg IV
- External cardiac pacemaker
- Isoproterenol infusion at 2 mcg/min, titrate up
- Normal saline
- Potassium infusion at 10 mEq/hr
28Bradycardia
- Approach to undifferentiated bradycardia based on
hemodynamic stability - If stable, observe
- If unstable
- Atropine 0.5 mg IVP, up to 3 mg
- Dopamine or Epinephrine drip
- External pacing
- Transvenous pacing
29Interlude Wencke Back
30(No Transcript)
31Question 6
- Which of the following statements regarding
cardiac serum markers is correct?
PEER VII Q342
32Q6 (continued)
- BNP level has little correlation with recurrent
acute coronary syndromes - CPK appears within 1-2 hours after an acute MI
and gone within 24 hours - Myoglobin appears within 1-2 hours after acute MI
and peaks at 5-7 hours - Total CPK is more specific for acute cardiac
ischemia than CK-MB - Troponins appear in the first 4 hours after an MI
and are gone by 24 to 36 hours.
33Q6 Answer
- BNP level has little correlation with recurrent
acute coronary syndromes - CPK appears within 1-2 hours after an acute MI
and gone within 24 hours - Myoglobin appears within 1-2 hours after acute MI
and peaks at 5-7 hours - Total CPK is more specific for acute cardiac
ischemia than CK-MB - Troponins appear in the first 4 hours after an MI
and are gone by 24 to 36 hours.
34Cardiac Serum Markers
- Myoglobin is the earliest
- Troponin is the most sensitive and specific
http//www.uptodateonline.com
35Cardiac Serum Markers
- Troponins and Renal Failure
- Tropnonin clearance is delayed
- Troponins are not cleared by dialysis
- High false-positive rate1
- Elevated troponins correlate with poor prognosis
- Any non-zero level warrants serial troponins2,3
1 Apple FS,et al. Predictive valueCirculation
2002 Dec 3106(23)2941-5. 2 http//www.kidney.org
/professionals/KDOQI/guidelines_cvd/troponin.htm 3
http//www.uptodateonline.com
36Question 7
- An 82 yo woman presents with 1 hour of
substernal chest pressure, dyspnea, and
diaphoresis. Her EKG is shown below. No old EKG
is available for comparison. Her first set of
cardiac enzymes is negative. Which of the
following is the most appropriate treatment?
Promes Q3-4
37Q7 (continued)
38Q7 (continued)
- Admit the patient to a monitored bed
- Observe the patient, order serial cardiac markers
and discharge if negative - Administer thrombolytics
- Cardiovert the patient with 50 joules
- Stress testing once serial cardiac enzymes are
negative
39Q7 Answer
- Admit the patient to a monitored bed
- Observe the patient, order serial cardiac markers
and discharge if negative - Administer thrombolytics
- Cardiovert the patient with 50 joules
- Stress testing once serial cardiac enzymes are
negative
40STEMI / LBBB
- STEMI
- Presence of ST elevations of greater than 1mm in
two or more anatomically contiguous leads - LBBB
- QRS gt 0.12 s (120ms)
- Wide, notched R wave in I, aVL, V6
- Small R and deep S in II, III, aVF, V1-V3
41STEMI / LBBB
- Indications for Thrombolysis / PCI
- MI that meets STEMI criteria
- MI symptoms and new LBBB
- Acute Posterior MI
- Isolated ST-segment depression of at least 1mm in
2 or more leads from V1-V4
ACEP Clinical Policy Indications for Reperfusion
TherapyAnn Emerg Med. 200648358-383.
42Question 8
- Which of the following statements is true
concerning infective endocarditis in IV drug
users?
PEER V Q9
43Q8 (continued)
- Most commonly affects the mitral value
- Rarely associated with septic emboli
- Cardiac murmurs frequently are absent at initial
presentation - Steptococcus viridans is the most common
causative organism - The majority of patients have previously damaged
heart valves
44Q8 Answer
- Most commonly affects the mitral value
- Rarely associated with septic emboli
- Cardiac murmurs frequently are absent at initial
presentation - Steptococcus viridans is the most common
causative organism - The majority of patients have previously damaged
heart valves
45IVDU Endocarditis
- Presentation can vary from subacute to acute
onset of fever, dyspnea, weakness, tachycardia,
dysrhythmias - High index of suspicion IVDU patients with fever
- Skin flora is most common Staph aureus,
including MRSA - Tricuspid is most commonly affected in IVDU
- In ED, obtain multiple cultures, treat with Abx
- Antibiotics vancomycin gent /- rifampin
46Question 9
- Which of the following drugs can be used to
treat a patient with known Wolff-Parkinson-White
syndrome who presents with the rhythm depicted
below
PEER VII Q126
47Q9 (continued)
- Adenosine
- Digoxin
- Diltiazem
- Metoprolol
- Procainamide
PEER VII Q126
48Q9 Answer
- Adenosine
- Digoxin
- Diltiazem
- Metoprolol
- Procainamide
49Wolff-Parkinson-White
- Syndrome of pre-excitation due to accessory
pathway from atria to ventricles - EKG
- Short PR interval
- Delta wave slurred upstroke of QRS complex
http//medicalfinals.co.uk/QuizJanuary2006Answers.
html
50Wolff-Parkinson-White
- Orthodromic (narrow complex) AVRT
- Anterograde conduction in accessory tract
- Adenosine 6 mg IV or Verapamil 5 to 10 mg IV
- Antidromic (wide complex) AVRT or Afib / Aflut
- Retrograde conduction in accessory tract
- No AV nodal blockers
- If stable amiodarone or procainamide
- If unstable synchonized cardioversion
51Question 10
- An 8 yo boy presents with history of chest pain
that gradually worsened while he was watching
television with his mother. The pain lasted 2
hours and then resolved without intervention.
There was no associated dyspnea or syncope. He
has no significant past medical history. Family
history includes a grandmother who died of a
heart attack. Physical exam, ECG, and CXR are
normal. What is the most appropriate next step
in the emergency department?
PEER VII Q338
52Q10 (continued)
- Administer albuterol and check peak flow
- Discharge home with primary care followup
- Laboratory evaluation, including cardiac markers
- Observation admission for treadmill testing
- Outpatient echo and Holter monitor
53Q10 Answer
- Administer albuterol and check peak flow
- Discharge home with primary care followup
- Laboratory evaluation, including cardiac markers
- Observation admission for treadmill testing
- Outpatient echo and Holter monitor
54Pediatric Chest Pain
- Rarely serious unless accompanied by
- Syncope
- Dyspnea
- Fever
- Congential Heart Disease
- Cyanosis
- Congestive Heart Failure
- Return to regular activity is the norm
55InterludeFat Kids
56(No Transcript)
57Question 11
- A 60 yo F with a history of end-stage renal
disease on hemodialysis presents unresponsive
with only a weak carotid pulse. Cardiac
monitoring is started (see below), and CPR is
initiated. Intravenous access is established,
and the patient is intubated. The next step in
management should be
PEER VII Q300
58Q11 (continued)
http//sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/heart/ecgk1.html
59Q11 (continued)
- Atropine 1 mg IV, amiodarone 300 mg IV slow push
- Calcium chloride 1 amp IV, insulin 10 units IV,
and dextrose 50 g IV - Dopamine wide open, and prepare for external
pacemaking - Magnesium sulfate 2 g slow IV push, potassium
chloride 10 mEq over 20 minutes - Normal saline 500 mL bolus and pericardiocentesis
60Q11 Answer
- Atropine 1 mg IV, amiodarone 300 mg IV slow push
- Calcium chloride 1 amp IV, insulin 10 units IV,
and dextrose 50 g IV - Dopamine wide open, and prepare for external
pacemaking - Magnesium sulfate 2 g slow IV push, potassium
chloride 10 mEq over 20 minutes - Normal saline 500 mL bolus and pericardiocentesis
61Hyperkalemia
- EKG changes
- Peaked T waves
- PR prolongation
- QRS prolongation, P wave flattening
- Loss of P wave, QRS prolongation to sine wave
Webster, et al. Recognising signs of danger.
Emerg. Med. J., Jan 2002 19 74 77.
62Hyperkalemia
http//sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/heart/ecgk1.html ht
tp//urbanhealth.udmercy.edu/ekg/pdf/hyperkalemia.
pdf
63Hyperkalemia
- Treatment
- Calcium chloride or gluconate
- Dextrose Insulin
- Bicarbonate
- Lasix
- Albuterol
- Kayexalate
64Question 12
- A 49 yo M presents after he fainted while
running on his treadmill at home. He has been
having exertional dyspnea and angina for the past
several months. Which of the following disease
is most likely to cause these symptoms?
PEER VII Q230
65Q12 (continued)
- Aortic stenosis
- Pulmonary embolus
- Mitral incompetence
- Pulmonary stenosis
- Tricuspid incompetence
66Q12 Answer
- Aortic stenosis
- Pulmonary embolus
- Mitral incompetence
- Pulmonary stenosis
- Tricuspid incompetence
67Aortic Stenosis
- Bimodal distribution
- Under 65 bicuspid aortic valve
- Over 65 calcific degeneration
- Outflow tract obstruction with LVH
- Crescendo-decrescendo systolic murmur
- Classic symptoms
- DOE
- Syncope
- Angina
- This is the classic AS question
68Question 13
- Which of the following is the most common ECG
abnormality associated with mitral valve prolapse?
PEER VII Q222
69Q13 (continued)
- Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia
- QT prolongation
- Rapid atrial fibrillation
- ST-segment depression in leads II, III, aVF
- Ventricular tachycardia
70Q13 Answer
- Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia
- QT prolongation
- Rapid atrial fibrillation
- ST-segment depression in leads II, III, aVF
- Ventricular tachycardia
71Mitral Valve Prolapse
- Most common valvular heart disease 2.4
- Usually asymptomatic
- When symptomatic
- Non-exertional chest pain
- Palpitations
- Fatigue
- Dyspnea unrelated to exertion
- Increased incidence of WPW
- Echo and outpatient cardiology management
72Question 14
- A 70 yo M complains of severe diffuse abdominal
discomfort that began in his lower epigastric
region 3 hours earlier, shortly after he ate
burger and fries. He denies chest pain, SOB, and
flank pain. He has a history of CHF. Physical
exam reveals an elderly man in severe discomfort.
Vital signs are remarkable for only a mild
tachycardia. The abdomen is soft and
nondistended, with diffuse pain to all areas on
palpation. There is no rebound. Pulses are
normal there are no bruits or masses. What is
the most likely diagnosis?
PEER VII Q19
73Q14 (continued)
- Mesenteric ischemia
- MI
- Aortic dissection
- Pancreatitis
- Ruptured abdominal aneurysm
74Q14 Answer
- Mesenteric ischemia
- MI
- Aortic dissection
- Pancreatitis
- Ruptured abdominal aneurysm
75Mesenteric Ischemia
- Elderly patients with severe pain out of
proportion to the physical exam - Pain is poorly localized
- Risk factors
- Atrial Fibrillation
- Vascular disease
- CHF
- Hypercoagulability
76Mesenteric Ischemia
- Acute thromboembolic phenomena
- Chronic usually due to long-standing
atherosclerotic disease (intestinal angina) - High mortality due to risk of bowel necrosis
- Workup
- CT Angio vs conventional angiography
- Serial lactate levels
- Early surgical consultation
77Question 15
- Which of the following patients is the most
appropriate candidate for pacing therapy with a
transcutaneous cardiac pacemaker?
PEER V Q2
78Q15 (continued)
- 25 yo severely hypothermic M with marked
bradycardia BP undetectable, P 30 - 43 yo M with bradysystolic cardiac arrest for 40
minutes, BP undetectable, P 15 - 61 yo F with 1st degree AV block and sinus
bradycardia unresponsive to 1 mg atropine BP
90/60, P 48 - 58 yo F with 3rd degree AV block unresponsive to
3 mg atropine, BP 80/50, P 40 - 78 yo M with Mobitz I second-degree AV block, BP
90/40, P 70
79Q15 Answer
- 25 yo severely hypothermic M with marked
bradycardia BP undetectable, P 30 - 43 yo M with bradysystolic cardiac arrest for 40
minutes, BP undetectable, P 15 - 61 yo F with 1st degree AV block and sinus
bradycardia unresponsive to 1 mg atropine BP
90/60, P 48 - 58 yo F with 3rd degree AV block unresponsive to
3 mg atropine, BP 80/50, P 40 - 78 yo M with Mobitz I second-degree AV block, BP
90/40, P 70
80Bradycardia
- Approach to undifferentiated bradycardia based on
hemodynamic stability - If stable, observe
- If unstable
- Atropine 0.5 mg IVP, up to 3 mg
- Dopamine or Epinephrine drip
- External pacing
- Transvenous pacing