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Cardiovascular Pathophysiology

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Title: Cardiovascular Pathophysiology


1
Cardiovascular Pathophysiology
Lectures 1-3 What can go wrong?
2
What can go wrong?
Jot down your ideas
Hints Cardiac Output HR X Stroke Volume BP CO
X Total Peripheral Resistance
3
Introduction
  • A knowledge of normal cardiac structure and
    function is crucial to understanding diseases
    that affect the heart. (You should be familiar
    with the following diagrams and concepts!)
  • What are the controlled variables?
  • What are the basic equations?
  • From your current knowledge, you will be invited
    to postulate what malfunctions may arise in the
    cardiovascular system.
  • We will compare this with a brief systematic
    overview of selected aspects of cardiovascular
    pathophysiology (note the overlaps).
  • Wherein lies the greatest risk? - i.e. what will
    most people die of?

4
Heart - gross anatomy
5
Heart - internal anatomy
6
Cardiac output
7
Reflex control of heart rate
8
A-Z of cardiovascular pathophysiology
  • Abnormal Heart Rhythms
  • Aneurysms and Aortic Dissection
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Coronary Artery Disease
  • Heart Failure
  • Heart Valve Disorders
  • High Blood Pressure Low Blood Pressure
  • Infective Endocarditis
  • Pericardial Disease
  • Peripheral Arterial Disease
  • Venous Disorders
  • What is Congestive Heart Failure?

9
Abnormal Heart Rhythms
  • Abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias) are
    sequences of heartbeats that are irregular, too
    fast, too slow, or conducted via an abnormal
    electrical pathway through the heart
  • Disorders of impulse formation and conduction
    result in bradyarrhythmias and tachyarrhythmias
  • Fast arrhythmias (tachyarrhythmias) may be
    triggered by exercise, emotional stress,
    excessive alcohol consumption, smoking, or use of
    drugs that contain stimulants, such as cold and
    hay fever remedies.
  • Slow arrhythmias (bradyarrhythmias) may be
    triggered by pain, hunger, fatigue, digestive
    disorders (such as diarrhea and vomiting), or
    swallowing, which can stimulate the vagus nerve
    excessively. (With enough stimulation, which is
    rare, the vagus nerve can cause the heart to
    stop.) In most of these circumstances, the
    arrhythmia tends to resolve on its own.
  • Careful analysis of ECG records distinguishes
    between the different disorders to allow
    appropriate therapy to be applied.

10
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11
Examples of ECGs seen with abnormal heart rhythms

12
Abnormal Heart Rhythms
  • Atrial Fibrillation and Atrial Flutter
  • Atrial Premature Beats
  • Bundle Branch Block
  • Heart Block
  • Pacemaker Dysfunction
  • Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia
  • Ventricular Fibrillation
  • Ventricular Premature Beats
  • Ventricular Tachycardia
  • Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome - this is a
    disorder in which an extra electrical connection
    between the atria and the ventricles is present
    at birth

13
The main mechanisms of Arrhythmogenesis
14
Aneurysms and Aortic Dissection
  • Disorders of the aorta include bulges (aneurysms)
    in weak areas of its walls and separation of the
    layers of its wall (dissection). These disorders
    can be immediately fatal, but they usually take
    years to develop. Aneurysms may also develop in
    other arteries.
  • Aneurysms can develop anywhere along the aorta.
    Three fourths of aortic aneurysms develop in the
    abdominal aorta and the rest develop in the
    thoracic aorta.
  • Aneurysms can also develop in the arteries at the
    back of the knee (popliteal arteries), the
    femoral arteries, the carotid arteries, the
    cerebral arteries), and the coronary arteries.
  • The most common cause of aneurysms is
    atherosclerosis,
  • An aortic dissection (dissecting aneurysm,
    dissecting hematoma) is an often fatal disorder
    in which the inner layer (lining) of the aortic
    wall tears.
  • Most aortic dissections occur because the
    artery's wall deteriorates where such
    deterioration is usually associated with high
    blood pressure

15
Aneurysms and Aortic Dissection
In an aortic dissection, the inner layer (lining)
of the aortic wall tears, and blood surges
through the tear, separating (dissecting) the
middle layer from the outer layer of the wall. As
a result, a new, false channel forms in the
wall.
Aneurysms can develop anywhere along the aorta.
Most develop in the abdominal aorta. The rest
develop in the thoracic aorta, most commonly in
the ascending aorta.
16
Atherosclerosis
  • Atherosclerosis is a condition in which patchy
    deposits of fatty material (atheromas or
    atherosclerotic plaques) develop in the walls of
    medium-sized and large arteries, leading to
    reduced or blocked blood flow (see figure under
    peripheral vascular disease section).
  • In the United States and most other Western
    countries, atherosclerosis is the leading cause
    of illness and death..
  • Atherosclerosis can affect the medium-sized and
    large arteries of the brain, heart, kidneys,
    other vital organs, and legs. It is the most
    important and most common type of circulatory
    disorder and is the underlying cause for several
    diseases in which result when the wall of an
    artery becomes thicker and less elastic.
  • Despite significant medical advances, heart
    attacks due to coronary artery disease
    (atherosclerosis that affects the arteries
    supplying blood to the heart and strokes (due to
    atherosclerosis that affects the arteries to the
    brain are responsible for more deaths than all
    other causes combined.

17
Cardiomyopathy
  • Cardiomyopathy refers to progressive impairment
    of the structure and function of the muscular
    walls of the heart chambers.
  • There are three main types of cardiomyopathy
    dilated, hypertrophic, and restrictive.
  • In dilated cardiomyopathy, the ventricles enlarge
    and impair systolic function. Progressive left
    ventricular enlargement lead to heart failure
    ventricular arrhythmias and embolic
    complications.
  • In hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the walls of the
    ventricles thicken and become stiff and impair
    diastolic relaxation. The associated rise in LV
    pressure is transmitted back leading the elevated
    left atrial and consequently pulmonary capillary
    pressure.
  • In restrictive cardiomyopathy, which is uncommon,
    the walls of the ventricles become stiff, but not
    necessarily thickened due to an infiltrated of
    fibrotic myocardium (sounds like?). Has a poor
    prognosis and leads ultimately to congestive
    heart failure.

18
Coronary Artery Disease
  • Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a condition in
    which the blood supply to the heart muscle is
    partially or completely blocked.
  • CAD is almost always due to the build-up of
    cholesterol and other fatty materials (called
    atheromas or atherosclerotic plaques) in the wall
    of a coronary artery. Occasionally CAD results
    from a spasm of an artery, and rarely, the cause
    is a birth defect, or an infection leading to
    inflammation of the arteries (arteritis), or
    physical damage (from an injury or radiation
    therapy).
  • CAD is the most common cause of myocardial
    ischemia. The major complications of coronary
    artery disease are chest pain due to myocardial
    ischemia (angina) and heart attack (myocardial
    infarction).
  • CAD is the most common type of cardiovascular
    disease, occurring in about 5 to 9 of people
    aged 20 and older. The death rate increases with
    age and overall is higher for men than for women.
    After age 55, the death rate for men declines,
    and the rate for women continues to climb. After
    age 70 to 75, the death rate for women exceeds
    that for men who are the same age.

19
Heart Failure
  • Heart failure is a disorder in which the heart
    pumps blood inadequately, leading to reduced
    blood flow, back-up (congestion) of blood in the
    veins and lungs, and other changes that may
    further weaken the heart.
  • Heart failure has two main forms the more
    common, systolic dysfunction and less common
    diastolic dysfunction.
  • In systolic dysfunction, the heart contracts less
    forcefully and cannot pump out as much of the
    blood that is returned to it as it normally does.
    As a result, more blood remains in the lower
    chambers of the heart (ventricles). Blood then
    accumulates in the veins.
  • In diastolic dysfunction, the heart is stiff and
    does not relax normally after contracting. Even
    though it may be able to pump a normal amount of
    blood out of the ventricles, the stiff heart does
    not allow as much blood to enter its chambers
    from the veins. As in systolic dysfunction, the
    blood returning to the heart then accumulates in
    the veins. Often, both forms of heart failure
    occur together.

20
Heart Failure
Systolic Dysfunction Disorders that cause
systolic dysfunction may impair the entire heart
or one area of the heart. As a result, the heart
does not contract normally. Coronary artery
disease is a common cause of systolic
dysfunction. It can impair large areas of heart
muscle because it can reduce blood flow to
large areas of heart muscle.
Diastolic Dysfunction Inadequately treated high
blood pressure is the most common cause of
diastolic dysfunction. High blood pressure
stresses the heart because the heart must pump
blood more forcefully than normal to force blood
into the arteries against the higher pressure.
Eventually, the heart's walls thicken
(hypertrophy), then stiffen. The stiff heart does
not fill quickly or adequately, so that with each
contraction, the heart pumps less blood than it
normally does.
21
Mechanisms and Examples that Cause Left Sided
Heart Failure
22
Heart Valve Disorders
  • Heart valves regulate the flow of blood through
    the atria and the ventricles
  • Each ventricle has a one-way inlet valve and a
    one-way outlet valve and each valve consists of
    flaps (cusps or leaflets
  • In the right ventricle, the inlet valve is the
    tricuspid valve, which opens from the right
    atrium, and the outlet valve is the pulmonary
    (pulmonic) valve, which opens into the pulmonary
    arteries.
  • In the left ventricle, the inlet valve is the
    mitral valve, which opens from the left atrium,
    and the outlet valve is the aortic valve, which
    opens into the aorta.
  • The heart valves can malfunction either by
    leaking (causing regurgitation) or by not opening
    adequately and thus partially blocking the flow
    of blood through the valve (causing stenosis).
    Either problem can greatly interfere with the
    heart's ability to pump blood. Sometimes a valve
    has both problems.

23
Systole
Diastole
In mitral stenosis, the mitral valve opening is
narrowed, and blood flow from the left atrium
into the left ventricle during diastole is
reduced.
In mitral regurgitation, the mitral valve leaks
when the left ventricle contracts (during
systole), and some blood flows backward into the
left atrium.
24
High Low Blood Pressure
  • High blood pressure (hypertension) is abnormally
    high pressure in the arteries. High blood
    pressure is defined as a systolic pressure at
    rest that averages 140 mm Hg or more, a diastolic
    pressure at rest that averages 90 mm Hg or more,
    or both
  • Low blood pressure (hypotension) is blood
    pressure low enough to cause symptoms such as
    dizziness and fainting.
  • Normally, the body maintains the pressure of
    blood in the arteries within a narrow range. If
    blood pressure is too high, it can damage a blood
    vessel and even rupture it, causing bleeding or
    other complications.
  • If blood pressure is too low, not enough blood
    reaches all parts of the body as a result, cells
    do not receive enough oxygen and nutrients, and
    waste products are not adequately removed. Even
    so, having low blood pressure is generally better
    than having high blood pressure.
  • Healthy people who have blood pressure that is
    low but still in the normal range (when measured
    at rest) tend to live longer than those who have
    higher normal blood pressure

25
Factors that influence MAP
26
Pressure, resistance flow
  • Pressure gradient in the blood vessels. Mean
    systemic blood pressure ranges from 93 mm Hg in
    the arteries to about 10 mm Hg in the venae cava.
  • The velocity of the flow depends on the total
    cross sectional area.
  • Flow is slowest in the capillaries and most rapid
    in the aorta major arteries

27
Why systemic blood pressure?
Systolic arterial pressure.
Pulse pressure Systolic arterial pressure -
Diastolic arterial pressure.
Diastolic arterial pressure.
Mean arterial pressure can be estimated as
diastolic pressure plus one-third pulse pressure.
28
Pericardial Disease
  • Pericardial disease affects the pericardium,
    which is the flexible two-layered sac that
    envelops the heart.
  • The pericardium helps keep the heart in position,
    prevent the heart from overfilling with blood,
    and protect the heart from being damaged by chest
    infections. The pericardium is not essential to
    life if the pericardium is removed, there is
    little effect on cardiac function.
  • Acute pericarditis is inflammation of the
    pericardium that begins suddenly, is often
    painful, and causes fluid and blood components
    such as fibrin, red blood cells, and white blood
    cells to pour into the pericardial space.
  • Chronic pericarditis is inflammation that begins
    gradually, is long-lasting, and results in fluid
    accumulation in the pericardial space or
    thickening of the pericardium.
  • Symptoms of pericarditis include shortness of
    breath, coughing, and fatigue. Coughing occurs
    because the high pressure in the veins causes
    pulmonary oedema

29
Cardiac tamponade is the most serious
complication of pericarditis and most commonly
caused by accumulation of fluid or blood between
the two layers of the pericardium. This may
result from cancer, injury, surgery, viral and
bacterial infections and kidney failure. The
accumulating fluid or blood puts pressure on the
heart, interfering with its ability to pump
blood. As a result, when a person breathes in,
blood pressure may fall rapidly to abnormally low
levels and the pulse may correspondingly weaken.
When a person breathes out, blood pressure
increases and the pulse becomes stronger. This
exaggeration in the variation in blood pressure
and pulse that occurs with breathing is called a
paradoxical pulse.
30
Peripheral Arterial Disease
  • Peripheral arterial disease results in reduced
    blood flow in the arteries of the trunk, arms,
    and legs. Disorders affecting arteries that
    supply the brain are considered separately as
    cerebrovascular disease.
  • Peripheral arterial disease may be described as
    occlusive or functional.
  • Occlusive peripheral arterial disease is due to
    structural changes that narrow or block arteries
    and often results from atherosclerosis.
  • Functional peripheral arterial disease is usually
    due to a sudden temporary narrowing (spasm) or,
    rarely, to a widening (vasodilation) of arteries.
    Raynaud's disease and Raynaud's phenomenon are
    conditions in which small arteries (arterioles),
    usually in the fingers or toes, constrict more
    tightly in response to exposure to cold.
  • Functional peripheral arterial disease usually
    occurs when the normal mechanisms that dilate and
    constrict these arteries are exaggerated. The
    affected arteries constrict more tightly and more
    often.

31
The fingertips of the hand on the right have
turned blue due to Raynaud's disease (i.e.
unknown cause).
How Atherosclerosis Develops
This patient's toes have a whitish discoloration
due to Raynaud's phenomenon caused by
scleroderma.
32
Venous Disorders
  • The main problems that affect the veins include
    inflammation, clotting, and defects that lead to
    distension and varicose veins. The veins in the
    legs are particularly affected because when a
    person is standing, blood must flow upward from
    the leg veins, against gravity, to reach the
    heart.
  • Venous disorders results from poor blood flow can
    be classified as follows
  • An arteriovenous fistula is an abnormal channel
    between an artery and a vein.
  • Deep vein thrombosis is the formation of blood
    clots (thrombi) in the deep veins. Thrombi can
    occur either in the deep leg veins, causing deep
    vein thrombosis, or in the superficial leg veins,
    causing superficial thrombophlebitis
  • Superficial thrombophlebitis (superficial
    phlebitis) is inflammation and clotting in a
    superficial vein.
  • Varicose veins are abnormally enlarged
    superficial veins in the legs.

33
Valves in Varicose Veins
One-Way Valves in the Veins
34
What is Congestive Heart Failure?
  • Congestive heart failure leads to a reduction in
    Cardiac output
  • Reflex sympathetic compensation can increase
    Cardiac Output
  • Consequently elevated afterload reduces Cardiac
    Output
  • A cascade of events can lead to left ventricular
    hypertrophy (see diastolic dysfunction)
  • Angiotesin II also increases Cardiac Output
    sodium retention
  • However the angiotensin induced increase in
    Cardiac Output raises preload and Left
    Ventricular Diastolic Pressure which in turn
    leads to pulmonary oedema and premature death

35
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36
Factors that lead to Congestive Heart Failure
1. See bullet points 1- 5 for explanation
37
Frank Starling curve Congestive Heart Failure
  • Normal Cardiac Output is determined by the
    pressure in the left ventricle at end diastolic
    volume In SHF the set point for cardiac output is
    reduced and CO is reduced (1)
  • Compensation by sympathetic action (NA AD) are
    activated and increase End Diastolic Pressure and
    increase Cardiac Output. This can lead to
    backward heart failure (2).
  • Positive iontrophic agents increase cardiac
    output (3)
  • This improves Cardiac Output and reduces drive to
    increase end diastolic pressure and allow new set
    point (4) just short of backward failure.

38
Drugs used in the treatment Congestive Heart
Failure
Note the normal decline in SVF and its
exacerbation by disease
39
Drug mechanisms and Congestive Heart Failure
  • Normal CO is determined by the pressure in the
    left ventricle at end diastolic volume.
  • The course of CHF, without further intervention
    leads to forward failure (1) resulting from
    increased cardiac afterload caused by peripheral
    vasoconstriction and pulmonary congestion
  • Venodilation, diuretic therapy and ACE inhibitors
    reduce backward failure, the symptoms of oedema
    and congestion by reducing end diastolic
    pressure.
  • This improves cardiac output by reducing cardiac
    afterload and provides a new set point outside
    the forward and outward failure domains (2)

40
Summary
  • Mean arterial pressure, the primary regulated
    variable in the cardiovascular system, equals the
    product of cardiac output and total peripheral
    resistance.
  • Why because Blood flow between two points in the
    cardiovascular system is directly proportional to
    the pressure difference between the points and
    inversely proportional to the resistance. The
    resistance of the arterioles and the
    pre-capillary sphincters supplying the
    capillaries determines the flow. This is
    regulated.
  • Homeostatic regulation of the cardiovascular
    system (via a range of reflex loops) maintains an
    adequate blood flow to the brain, heart and
    tissues.
  • Failure of this control leads to heart failure in
    its various guises that can be understood by
    consideration of basic physiological mechanisms.
  • Failure of sub-components of the circulatory
    system lead to a wide range of common diseases
    that reveal the subtleties of CVS control
    mechanisms.
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