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Dr.Hesham Noor, MBBCH,M.Sc.M.D

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What are the functional studies used to assess myocardial viability after myocardial infarction (MI)? Assessment of risk Euroscore 1-Age : for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dr.Hesham Noor, MBBCH,M.Sc.M.D


1
Dr.Hesham Noor, MBBCH,M.Sc.M.D
  • Assistant Prof. and Consultant Of General Surgery

2
CARDIAC SURGERY
3
Valvular heart disease
  • Aetiology
  • Causes vary between developed and developing
    countries
  • Common causes are
  • Congenital Valvular abnormalities (e.g.
    bicuspid aortic valve)
  • Acquired
  • Rheumatic fever
  • Infective endocarditis
  • Degenerative valve disease
  • Ischaemic heart disease IHD/CAD

4
Pathophysiology and Heamodyamics
  • Rheumatic fever results from immune-mediated
    inflammation of heart valve resulting in either
    stenosis or incompetence or both of them
  • Due to cross-reactivity between Group A B-
    haemolytic strep antigens and the cardiac
    proteins
  • Stenosis causes pressure overload on proximal
    chamber
  • Incompetence causes volume overload proximal
    chamber
  • AF and Thrombus may form in dilated left
    atrium resulting in peripheral embolisation
    (Distal Showering)
  • MVO
  • ACUTE LIMB ISCHAEMIA
  • CEREBRAL STROKE

5
Clinical Features
  • Aortic stenosis (Subvalvulae/valvular/supravalvula
    r)
  • Angina pectoris
  • Syncopal episodes
  • Left ventricular failure
  • Ejection systolic murmur in 2nd right intercostal
    space
  • Aortic regurgitation Acute /Chronic
  • Congestive cardiac failure
  • Increased pulse pressure Water-hammer pulse
  • Early diastolic murmur at left sternal edge

6
  • Mitral stenosis
  • Pulmonary hypertension
  • Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Loud first heart sound
  • Mid diastolic murmur at apex
  • Mitral regurgitation
  • Pulmonary oedema
  • Apex beat displace laterally
  • Apical pansystolic murmur

7
  • Tricuspid stenosis
  • Fatigue and peripheral oedema
  • Hepatomegaly and ascites
  • Increased JVP with prominent a waves
  • Diastolic murmur at left sternal edge
  • Tricuspid regurgitation
  • Pulsatile hepatomegaly and ascites
  • Right ventricular heave
  • Prominent JVP with large v waves
  • Pansystolic murmur at left sternal edge

8
New York Heart Association classification NYHA
  • Dyspnoea can be classified by severity of
    symptoms into 4 classes
  • NYHA I
  • No dyspnea ordinary physical activity
  • NYHA II
  • Ordinary physical activity induces dyspnoea
  • NYHA III
  • Limitation of ordinary physical activity
  • NYHA IV
  • Rest Dyspnea

9
Investigations
  • Non-invasive
  • Electrocardiogram
  • Chest x-ray
  • Echocardiography Transthoracic ECHO
  • Invasive
  • Transoesophageal ECHO
  • Cardiac catheterisation
  • To measure the transvalvular pressure gradient

10
Medical Management
  • Few patients with symptomatic aortic stenosis
    survive 5 years and about 20 of symptomatic
    patients will suffer sudden death
  • Asymptomatic mitral stenosis is well tolerated
    with greater than 50 10-year survival
  • Medical management consists of
  • Treatment of cardiac failure
  • Digitalisation if in AF
  • Diuretics
  • Prophylactic Oral Anticoagulation if evidence
    of Lt. atrial thrombus or peripheral
    embolisation

11
Surgical management
  • Approximately 7,000 patients per year undergo
    valve replacement .Aortic valve is commonest to
    be replaced (75 of operations)
  • Surgery performed through a median sternotomy
  • On cardiopulmonary bypass (CPBP) with systemic
    hypothermia
  • Heart is arrested and protected with cardioplegic
    solution
  • Valve can be either dilated , repaired or
    replaced
  • Valve repair results in better haemodynamics and
    does not require long-term anticoagulation

12
Indications for surgery
  • Aortic valve replacement
  • Symptomatic aortic stenosis
  • Asymptomatic aortic stenosis with pressure
    gradient gt 50 mmHg
  • Symptomatic aortic regurgitation
  • Mitral valve replacement
  • Symptomatic mitral stenosis
  • MS with peripheral emboli or distal showering
  • Mitral valve area less than 1 cm2 
  • MS with Pulmonary Hypertension

13
  • Three surgical options For the Mitral Valve
  • Valvuloplasty (REPAIR)
  • Commissurotomy (VALVOTOMY)
  • Mitral valve replacement

14
Prosthetic heart valves
  • Principal types of valves
  • Heterografts (e.g. pig) Stented or Unstented
  • Homografts
  • MECHANICAL
  • Ball and cage (e.g. Starr-Edwards)
  • Tilting disc (e.g. Bjork-Shiley)

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Mechanical valves
  • Readily available
  • Good durability/Life Span
  • Require life-long anticoagulation
  • Risk of endocarditis
  • Prophlactic antibiotics must be given before any
    invasive procedure or surgery for patients with
    prosthetic valves

17
  • Heterografts
  • Readily available
  • Limited life span (aortic valves 15 years,
    mitral valve 8 years)
  • Limited duration of anticoagulation
  • Homografts
  • Not readily available
  • Long-term outcome uncertain
  • Do not require anticoagulation

18
Coronary artery surgery
  • 3 ARTERIES OF LIFE
  • Right coronary artery (RCA)
  • Left anterior descending artery (LADA)
  • Left Circumflex coronary artery (LCCA)
  • Atherosclerosis occurs in the proximal
    portions of these vessels(At the Coronary Ostia
    arising from the ASCENDING Aorta)
  • Depending on number of vessels involved
  • Single-vessel disease
  • Double-vessel disease
  • Triple-vessel disease
  • Prognosis depends on
  • Number of vessels involved
  • Left ventricular function (EJECTION FRACTION)

19
  • The internal mammary artery, a branch of the
    subclavian artery, descends along the pleura
    behind the costal cartilages ending at the 6th
    intercostal space where it divides to become the
    superior epigastric and musculophrenic arteries.

20
  • Risk factors can usefully be divided into fixed
    (non- modifiable) and modifiable risk factors.
  • Fixed risk factors include older age, male
    gender, family history, and a South Asian
    background.
  • Modifiable risk factors include hypertension.
    hyperlipidaemia. Diabetes, smoking, alcohol,
    exercise, and stress.

21
  • Modifiable risk factors
  • 6. Hypertension. If hypertensive, ask about
    latest blood pressure measurement, time since
    first diagnosis, and any medication being taken.
  • 7. Hyperlipidaemia. If hyperlipidaemic, ask about
    latest serum cholesterol level, time since first
    diagnosis, and any medication being taken.
  • 8. Diabetes mellitus. If diabetic, ask about
    medication being taken, level of diabetes control
    being achieved, and time since first diagnosis,
    and presence of complications.
  • 9. Cigarette smoking. If a smoker or ex-smoker.
    ask about number of years spent smoking and
    average number of cigarettes smoked per day.

22
  • 10. Alcohol. Ask about the number of units of
    alcohol drunk in a day.
  • 11. Lack of exercise. Ask about amount of
    exercise taken in a day or week. Does the patient
    walk to work or walk to the shops?
  • 12. Stress. Ask about occupational history and
    home/social life.

23
  • Having one or more of these risk factors does not
    mean that a person is going to develop
    cardiovascular disease, but merely that he is at
    increased probability of developing it.
  • Conversely, having no risk factors is not a
    guarantee that a person is not going to develop
    cardiovascular disease.
  • Coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease,
    Mesenteric Vascular disease and peripheral
    vascular disease) often coexist.

24
Investigations
  • 1-Left ventricular function test assessed by
    assessing ejection fraction on
  • Echocardiography
  • Angiography
  • Multi-gated acquisition (MUGA) scan
  • 2-Coronary angiography
  • a- Provides accurate anatomical diagnosis
    and may be combined with Coronary
    angioplasty treatment.
  • b- Allows Preoperative planning of the
    sites of grafting

25
  • Stress/Exercise ECG Identifies myocardial
    ischaemia and indicates severity of stenosis 75
    of patients with significant disease will have a
    positive result.
  • Stress/Exercise echocardiogram Shows abnormal
    myocardial contraction resulting from ischaemia.
    More sensitive than exercise ECG.

26
  • Coronary angioplasty Widens or recanalises
    occluded vessels with intracoronary stents or
    balloons.
  • Provides good symptom relief but there is still
    debate about any prognostic advantage over
    medical therapy.
  • Recent trials
  • Drug-eluting stents (e.g. sirolimus, paclitaxel)
    reduce restenosis rates.
  • Surgical CABG is indicated for symptomatic
    angina not relieved by medical therapy and in
    patients with severe three-vessel coronary artery
    disease, left main stem coronary artery disease
    or coronary artery disease with impaired left
    ventricular function.

27
Indications for surgery
  • 1- Severe stenosis (gt70) of the left main stem
    or triple vessel disease
  • 2- Patients with poor left ventricular function
  • 3- Patients with multi-vessel disease

28
What are the indications for CABG?
  • 1- Chronic angina, unstable angina.
  • 2- Post-infarction angina
  • 3- Asymptomatic patients or patients with single
    or double-vessel disease showing reversible
    ischemia on stress test

29
What are the functional studies used to assess
myocardial viability after myocardial infarction
(MI)?
  • 1- PET Scan POSITRON EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY
  • 2- Thallium scan.
  • 3- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) viability
    scan

30
Assessment of risk
  • Patients at greatest risk have the greatest
    benefit to gain from surgical intervention
  • Mortality risk can be estimated using various
    scoring tools in which the risk is calculated by
    summating individual risk factors

31
Euroscore1-Age for each 5 years over 60 years
1 2-Female sex 1 3-Chronic respiratory
disease 1 4-Extracardiac arteriopathy 2
5-Neurological dysfunction 2 6-Creatinine
above 200 µmol/l 2 7-Previous cardiac surgery
3 8-Unstable angina 2 9-Recent Myocardial
infarction 210-Ejection fraction Good Nil
Moderate 1 Poor 3
  • Parsonnet score
  • 1-Age greater than 70 years 7
  • Age greater than 75 years 12
  • Age greater than 80 years 20
  • 2-Female sex 1
  • 3-Hypertension 3
  • 4-Diabetes 3
  • 5-Obesity 3
  • 6-Ejection Fraction
  • Good Nil
  • Moderate 2
  • Poor 4

32
Choice of conduit
  • Vascular Conduits for CAD can be either venous
    or arterial
  • 1- Long Saphenous Vein is easy to harvest by
    a second surgeon and allows multiple grafts to
    be fashioned
  • Patency rate 50 at 10 years
  • 2- Left internal mammary artery (LIMA) as
    been used to graft the left anterior descending
  • Patency rate 90 at 10 years

33
What are the other conduit options?
  • 1- Radial artery. RA
  • 2- Gastroepiploic artery. GEA
  • 3- Inferior epigastric artery. IEA
  • What is the risk of using both internal mammary
    arteries as conduits?
  • Sternal necrosis

34
  • Obtaining vein graft
  • The left internal mammary artery is dissected
    free from the anterior chest wall proximally up
    to the level of the subclavian vein and distally
    to its bifurcation.
  • If a leg vein graft is required, an incision is
    made from the groin to the midcalf to carefully
    excise and dissect free the long saphenous vein
    with ligation and division of any branches.

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Surgery
  • Chest is entered via a median sternotomy
  • Left internal mammary artery is dissected
  • Long saphenous vein can be harvested and prepared
    by second surgeon
  • Rt.Atrium is cannulated and patient is placed on
    cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB)
  • Aorta is cross clamped
  • MYOCARDIAL PROTECTION by cardioplegic solutions
  • Cardioplegia can be either warm (37 degrees) or
    cold (15-20 degrees) to induce a hypothermic,
    cardioplegic arrest.

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  • Recent advances include
  • 1- Off-pump coronary artery surgery (BEATING
    HEART SURGERY)
  • 2- Minimally invasive direct coronary artery
    surgery
  • Both can avoid either CPB or median sternotomy

39
Right atrial cannulation to drain venous blood
into venous reservoir by gravity .Oxygenation
and CO2 removal usually by membrane oxygenator
Air bubbles removal by A 40 mm filter. Heat
exchanger Lowers blood temperature at 5-10 C of
hypothermia Pump returns blood into aorta
distal to the cross clamp Suction used to remove
blood from operative field and returned to
patient via cardiotomy reservoir
40
Cardiac Transplantation
  • CARDIAC PACING

41
Congenital heart disease
  • Tetralogy of Fallot
  • The most common cyanotic heart defect and the
    commonost cause of blue baby syndrome.
  • It occurs in approximately 3 to 6 per 10,000
    births and account for 5-7 of congenital heart
    defects
  • Environmental or Genetic factors or a
    combination
  • Chromosome 22 deletions and diGeorge syndrome

42
  • TOF has 4 components
  • 1- Right ventricular outflow tract obstruction
    (infundibular stenosis)
  • 2- Ventricular septal defect
  • 3 Overiding of the Aorta (Aortic dextroposition
    to overrides VSD)
  • 4- Right ventricular hypertrophy
  • The VSD and Infundibular stenosis determine the
    pathophysiological features

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Pathology
  • Underdevelopment of the right ventricular
    infundibulum leading to displacement of the
    infundibular septum .This determines the degree
    of right ventricular outflow tract obstruction.
  • A large subaortic ventricular septal defect
    results in aortic overriding of the VSD into the
    right ventricle.

45
TOF with pulmonary Atresia (TOFPA) Variable
pulmonary blood flow is present via a patent
ductus arteriosus or aortopulmonary collaterals
Hyoplastic remnants Of the Pulmonary artery
branches
  • TOF with pulmonary Stenosis (TOFPS)
  • Hypoplastic RVOT is associated with pulmonary
    valve stenosis
  • The branches of pulmonary arteries are
    usually normal

46
  • In TOFPA, the source of pulmonary blood flow
    heavily influences the clinical presentation
  • The VSD is usually large and non restrictive
  • The severity of the RVOT and systemic
    vascular bed determines the pathophysiology and
    the natural history is determined by the
    severity of the RVOT obstruction
  • Prognosis
  • 25 of untreated infants die in 1st year of
    life
  • Risk of death is greatest in 1st year

47
Clinical features
  • Cyanosis
  • Usually constant But may be intermittent with
    hypoxic spells
  • Infants with severe infundibular stenosis and
    valvular stenosis are deeply cyanotic since
    birth
  • Cyanosis occurs later in infants with dominant
    infundibular stenosis
  • Systolic ejection murmur
  • The murmur disappears during a spell
  • Continuous murmurs may be found in patients with
    aortopulmonary collaterals
  • 2ry Polycythaemia
  • Clubbing
  • Develops in older infants , usually after 6
    months of age

48
Investigation
  • CXR shows a "boot-shaped" heart and is most
    common in older infants and children
  • ECG shows right ventricular hypertrophy and right
    axis deviation
  • Echocardiography shows the VSD and RVOT
    obstruction
  • Cardiac Catheterization Can delineate AV valve
    morphology, and central pulmonary arteries

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Management
  • Progressive hypoxemia (saturation 75-80) is
    an indication for operation
  • Occurrence of spells is a second indication
    for operation
  • Asymptomatic children with TOFPS and
    uncomplicated morphology should have elective
    repair between 3 and 24 months of age
  • Very young infants with complicated morphology
    can be managed with a staged shunt (usually
    modified Blalock-Taussig)

51
  • Many centres now perform single-stage complete
    repair regardless of age.
  • Advantages single-stage complete repair
  • 1- Avoid Prolonged RVOT obstruction and
    subsequent right ventricular hypertrophy
  • 2- Avoid Prolonged cyanosis

52
  • TOFPA treatment strategy depends on the pulmonary
    artery anatomy
  • The goal is to repair the defect and provide
    blood flow from the RV to as many pulmonary
    segments as possible
  • There are many surgical options
  • Shunting and second-stage repair
  • Relieve RVOT obstruction and leave VSD open,
    adding a shunt as necessary to maintain
    saturation
  • The residual VSD can be closed after further
    development of the pulmonary vasculature
  • Ligation of aortopulmonary collaterals may be
    necessary

53
Transposition of the great vessels
  • Present in the immediate neonatal period,
    particularly if no ventricular septal defect
    (VSD) is present
  • Infants can present in shock and severe
    acidosis
  • The infant is invariably cyanosed
  • No murmur is present, unless there is a VSD or
    some other structural cardiac lesion.

54
  • Radiologically
  • The lungs appear to have increased blood flow
    and increased pulmonary vascular markings.
  • The mediastinum is narrow, as the great
    arteries are running parallel.
  • Diagnosis is made by echocardiography that can
    shoe important important informations as
  • The size of the ductus arteriosus
  • Presence or Absence of VSD.
  • Degree of atrial mixing of blood

55
  • Infants with a large VSD or large atrial
    communication may present later, within the first
    2 weeks, with cyanosis. Cardiac failure may be
    present in the presence of a large VSD
  • In the short-term, a prostaglandin infusion
    therapy should be commenced to ensure ductal
    patency
  • A balloon atrial septostomy is usually
    performed within the first day or two of life to
    assist with mixing at an atrial level.
  • An arterial switch procedure is usually
    performed within the first week

56
Cardiac Tumours
  • LT ATRIAL MYXOMA
  • Benign tumour gelatinous firm mass can turn
    malignant
  • PUO PYREXIA OF UNKNOWN ORIGN
  • DISTAL EMBOLIZATION MAY BE THE FIRST PRESENTATION.

57
Aortic Coarctation
  • Coarctation of the aorta is narrowing
  • or constriction of the aorta and can occur along
    any of its portion.
  • It most commonly occurs distal to the origin of
    the left subclavian artery.
  • It is the most common congenital cardiovascular
    cause of hypertension, affecting more males than
    females in a ratio of 21. It occurs in 1 of
    every 2000 live term births

58
  • The clinical diagnosis of coarctation is made by
    comparison of the pulses and blood pressures of
    the extremities.
  • Obstruction proximal to the ligamentum
    arteriosum or is at the left subclavian artery
    a stronger pulse is felt in the right arm as
    compared to the left arm.
  • Obstruction is distal to the subclavian no
    difference between the upper extremities
  • Lower extremity pulses are weaker than upper
    extremity pulses.

59
  • Chest X-ray may show
  • Cardiomegaly with a dilated ascending
  • aorta or subclavian artery and poststenotic
    dilation of the descending aorta.
  • Rib notching is due to erosions and indentation
  • by tortuous collateral vessels.

60
  • Initial management
  • Decrease blood pressure with beta-blockers,
    ACE inhibitors, and Diuretics.
  • Definitive management
  • 1- Surgical repair Aortoplasty
  • Resection of the narrowed segment with Graft
    interposition
  • 2- Axillary to femoral bypass grafting may be
    used in high-risk patients.

61
ASD
  • May be INCIDENTAL FINDING
  • Should be closed optimal time is debated many
    are closed percutaneously (if child weight 10
    kg)

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VSD
  • Symptoms and signs if defect is small, no
    symptoms if large, defect causes heart failure
    with dyspnea, frequent respiratory infections,
    poor growth (FAILURE TO THRIVE )
  • Echocardiography is diagnostic
  • Small defects, which often close spontaneously by
    age 8 years large defects should be repaired.
  • Postinfarct VSD infarction of interventricular
    septum with subsequent VSD formation interval
    between MI and septal rupture is 112 days
    classically, sudden shock or congestive heart
    failure develops in a patient after MI.

64
PDA
  • Left-to-right shunt, pulmonary vascular
    congestion, PA hypertension, lung infection,
    right heart failure
  • Symptoms and signs infants have poor feeding,
    respiratory distress, frequent respiratory
    infection, heart failure older patients are
    often asymptomatic or have continuous murmur over
    pulmonary area
  • Treatment
  • Premature infants medical therapy with
    indomethacin (50success)
  • Full-term infants or children surgical
    obliteration by ligation, clipping, or division
  • Larger infants and children Video assisted
    thoracoscopy

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