Title: Adult Congenital Heart Disease Program
1Adult Congenital Heart Disease Program
- Division of Cardiology
- Dr. Simon Jackson
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Center
2An overview of Adult Congenital Heart Disease
3And.a practical approach to murmurs
4Objectives
- To gain an awareness of the resources available
for adults with congenital heart disease - To understand specific problems unique to the
ACHD population - Medical complications of cyanotic heart disease
- Psycho-social implications (impact of living with
chronic disease) - To understand the principle of SBE prophylaxis,
and which ACHD patients DO NOT require - To gain a practical approach to the assessment of
murmurs
5Why talk about ACHD?
- To increase your awareness of the complexity of
care for these young patients - To review some of the complex psycho-social
problems related to chronic illness and impact on
a normal life - To learn the specific complications of long term
cyanotic heart disease
6Adult Congenital Population
- North America -800,000 adults
- with a congenital cardiac anomaly
- Approximately 1400 new patients
- with significant congenital heart defects will
become adults in Canada each year
7Adult Congenital Population Subtypes
- Those who have received curative surgery
- Those who have had palliative procedures to
prolong life and improve its quality - Those for whom no treatment is available and care
is purely supportive - Those in whom a diagnosis and plan of action have
not yet been established
8Goals Adult Congenital Heart Program
- Provide comprehensive multi-disciplinary care to
the Adult Congenital patient population of the
Maritime provinces - Provide training opportunities in the area of
Adult Congenital Heart Disease - Provide education and support for adult
congenital heart disease patients, their families
and their primary care physicians - Contribute to clinical research in ACHD
9Adult Congenital Heart Program QE II HSC
- Three adult Cardiologists
- One rotating pediatric Cardiologist
- One Nurse - Coordinator
10Consultative Support
- Social work
- Psychology
- Genetic Assessment
- Obstetrics/Gynecology Electrophysiology
- CV Surgery
- Anesthesia
11QE II HSC ACHD
12QEII HSC ACHD Program
13Non-Cardiac Issues of ACHD Population
- Young population with associated co-morbidities
- Chronic illness
- Pregnancy and contraception
- Vocational counseling
- Un-insurability
- Uncertainty of the future
14Patient Education
- Despite its lifelong illness most adolescents and
young adults with CHD have inadequate knowledge
about their cardiac conditions. - Patients need appropriate information and
education to enable independent decision-making
about choices in care.
15Co-Morbidities
- Syndromes
- Post-pump complications
- Stroke
- Cognitive decline
- Respiratory disorders
- Neurologic sequlae
16Psychological Issues
- Adults with CHD face special challenges
- Employment
- Inter-personal relationships
- Assuming responsibility for their own health care
- Family planning
17Psychological Issues
- Long-term disturbances range from frank
psychiatric disorders to subclinical distress and
abnormalities in neurocognitive functioning
secondary to - chronic illness disability
- parental overprotection
- ischemia/hypoxia from operations
18 Uncertainty and Insurability
- Many patients are un-insurable
- Limits opportunities with work, business, owning
a home - Reinforces concerns about mortality
19Pregnancy
- Health of the mother
- Health of the fetus
- Risk of congenital disease in the offspring
20Pregnancy
- Pregnant women with CHD should be managed by the
patient's obstetrician and ACHD cardiologist
concurrently. - Post partum, the patients with CHD may need
ICU/monitoring facilities even for relatively
minor procedures or uncomplicated deliveries
21 QE II Health Sciences Pregnancies 1995
- 2002
- 1995 - 17(MRC Pregnancy Study)
- 1996 - 14
- 1997 - 4
- 1998 - 17
- 1999 - 17
- 2000 - 21
- 2001 - 22
- 2002 - 17
221988-2001 SummaryQE II HSC
- 81 pregnancies
- 57 Live births (70.4)
- 13 lost to followup, 4 TA, 6 SA, 1 stillbirth
- 7 (12 of live births) congenital defects
- gt20 (35 of live births) obstetrical events
- gt22 (39 of live births) cardiac events
23Pregnancy Contraindications
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Severe LV (systemic) dysfunction
- Marfan syndrome with dilated aortic root (gt 4 cm)
- Cyanotic heart disease
24Contraception
- OCP may be contra-indicated
- IUDs increased risk of bacterial endocarditis
- Permanent sterilization risk of the anesthetic
25Medical Issues
- Endocarditis prevention
- Other surgeries
- Specific conditions
- Eisenmengers syndrome
26Endocarditis
- Endovascular infection on some structure within
the heart, usually a heart valve - High morbidity and significant mortality
27Dental Care
- Regular dental care often in a hospital setting
is mandatory for adult patients with CHD to
decrease the likelihood of infective endocarditis - Endocarditis prophylaxis is recommended for all
dental work except for 'fillings above the gum
line'
28Endocarditis Prophylaxis
- Education and good dental hygeine
- Cardiac conditions are stratified into
- high
- moderate
- negligible risk categories
291997 ACC/AHA Recommendations
- High Risk
- those who have prosthetic heart valves
- a previous history of endocarditis
- complex cyanotic congenital heart disease, or
surgically constructed systemic pulmonary shunts
or conduits
301997 ACC/AHARecommendations
- For oral or dental procedures the initial
amoxicillin dose is reduced to 2 gm 1 hour pre
procedure - Clindamycin 600mg is offered to penecillin
allergic patients
311997 ACC/AHA Recommendations
- For gastrointestinal or genitourinary procedures,
the prophylactic regimens have been simplified - High Risk IV ampicillin 2gm plus gentamycin 1.5
mg/kg then po amoxil or iv ampicillin - Moderate risk 2 gm po amoxil 1 hour pre
32Non-Cardiac Surgery
- Performance of any surgical procedures in some
adult patients with CHD carries a greater risk
than in the normal population. - Evaluation in a referral centre prior to surgery
is recommended - Specific concerns regarding SBE prophylaxis, air
filters, risk DVT/PE and need for understaning of
physiology of lesion
33Physiologic Consequences of Cyanosis
- Secondary erythrocytosis is normal (Hb 200-220)
- Stimulus is low oxygen saturation leading to
increase erythropoetin leading to increased red
cell mass - Compensation to increase oxygen carried in the
blood
34Non-Cardiac Sequelae of Erythrocytosis and
Cyanosis
- Abnormal hemostasis,
- Easy bruising, epistaxis, gingival bleeding
- bleeding or traumatic bleeding (including
peri-operative bleeding) - Spontaneous intravascular thrombosis
35Non-Cardiac Sequelae of Erythrocytosis and
Cyanosis
- Hyperuricemia with gout, urate nephropathy
- Glomerular sclerosis, secondary to cyanosis, is
usually manifest initially as proteinuria - Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy
- Gallstones and cholecystitis
36Hyperviscosity
- Viscosity of blood increases with disorders of
increased cellular mass - thick blood clogs up capillaries leading to
symptoms - Headache, lethargy, confusion, vision change
progressing to stroke - Removal of RBCs is an effective treatment
37Care of the Cyanotic Patient
- Iron deficiency (anemia) is a crisis!
- Reduced oxygen carrying capacity and reduced
deformability of the red cells leads to increased
symptoms and possibly an increased risk of
stroke.
38Plebotomy
- Rarely required for the secondary increase in RBC
mass in cyanotic heart disease - Should only be done with adequte replacement of
volume - Can lead to iron deficiency anemia
39ACHD
- Know SBE prophylaxis
- The non-medical issues of ACHD
- Physiologic effects of cyanosis
40Question 1
- Aortic insufficiency produces a
- Systolic ejection murmur
- Diastolic ejection murmur
- Diastolic rumble
- Diastolic decresendo murmur
41Question 2
- Tricuspid insufficiency produces a
- Systolic ejection murmur
- Systolic rumble murmur
- Diastolic rumble
- Systolic regurgitant murmur
42Question 3
- Pulmonary stenosis produces a
- Systolic ejection murmur
- Diastolic decrescendo murmur
- Diastolic rumble
- Systolic regurgitant murmur
43Question 4
- Mitral stenosis produces a
- Diastolic rumble
- Systolic rumble
- Systolic regurgitant murmur
- Diastolic decrescendo murmur
44 Practical Approach to Murmurs
- Know what valves are open or closed in systole
and diastole - Decide if the murmur is systolic or diastolic
- Decide if the murmur character is
- Ejection
- Regurgitant
- Decrescendo
- Rumble
- Decide where is the murmur heard best
- Put it all together
45 Know what valves are open or closed in
systole?
- In systole (ventricles ejecting blood)
- AV and PV are open and
- the MV and TV are closed
- In diastole (ventricles being filled)
- MV and TV are open while
- the AV and PV are closed
46Facts you need to know
- Stenotic (narrowed) valves make noise when they
should be normally open (not opened enough) - Regurgitant (leaky, insufficient) valves make
noise when they should be closed (valves are
leaking blood the wrong way)
47Is the murmur systolic?
- Time the murmur with the pulse
- Murmurs heard when the pulse can be felt are
systolic
48 Facts Ejection Murmurs
- Ejection murmurs are always systolic (blood is
ejected in systole) - Ejection murmurs peak and (almost) always fall in
intensity - This means they begin after S1 and end (almost)
always before S2 - Ejection murmurs arise from the aortic valve or
pulmonary valve (or less commonly from the LV or
RV outflow tracts)
49 Regurgitant Murmurs
- Regurgitant murmurs means blood is regurgitating
(going the wrong way) - Regurgitant murmurs are high pitched (the flow is
from an area of high pressure to an area of much
lower pressure) - Systolic regurgitant murmurs are (almost) always
holosystolic ( pansystolic) and begin with S1
and end with S2 - Examples are
- mitral insuffiency
- tricuspid insufficiency.
- A VSD is another cause.
50Facts Diastolic Murmurs
- Diastolic murmurs can be
- Decrescendo high pitch, intensity decreasing
during diastole, due to insufficiency of AV or PV
- Rumbles low pitched, localized, heard with
bell, related to low pressure flow across a
narrowed valve, (mitral stenosis, tricuspid
stenosis)
51Final Facts
- Know the areas where the murmurs are heard best
- Aortic stenosis Aortic area
- Pulmonary stenosis Pulmonary area
- Tricuspid stenosis Tricuspid area
- Mitral stenosis Mitral area (apex)
52Final Facts
- Know the areas where the murmurs are heard
- Aortic insufficiency Left sternal edge
- Pulmonary insufficiency Pulmonary area
- Tricuspid insufficiency Tricuspid area
- Mitral insufficiency Mitral area, axilla,
rarely to aorta
Not where expected
53Case 1 Putting it together
- You hear a systolic ejection murmur loudest in
the upper right sternal border - Ejection murmurs come when a valve is not opened
properly (stenotic) - This is the aortic area
- This is the murmur of aortic stenosis
54Putting it together Case 2
- You hear a systolic murmur loudest in the apex
which is regurgitant - What is regurgitant? What does it mean?
- What valves should be closed in systole?
- What area is this?
- This is the murmur of mitral insufficiency
55Putting it together Case 3
- You hear a diastolic murmur loudest at the apex
which is low pitched, and localized. - What is another name for a low pitched murmur?
What does it imply? - What valves should be open in diastole?
- What area is this?
- This is the murmur of mitral stenosis
56Putting it together Case 4
- You hear a diastolic murmur loudest at the left
sternal border which is high pitched and
decreases in intensity during diastole. - What is another name this type of murmur? What
does it imply? - What valves should be closed in diastole?
- What area is this?
- This is the murmur of aortic insufficiency
57Describe the murmurs for the following lesions
- Pulmonary stenosis
- Pulmonary insufficiency
- Tricuspid stenosis
- Tricuspid insufficiency
58 How else do we sort out murmurs?
- Associated findings (intensity of heart sounds,
associated sounds, palpation of heart) - Radiation of murmur
- Effects of respiration, dynamic maneuvers
- Pattern recognition
- Knowledge of the disease process effecting the
heart