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Cardio Physical Exam
Cardio Physical Exam
53
Veterinary Medicine
Graduate
03/08/2012

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Cards

Term
What is orthopnea?
Definition
Dyspnea when lying down.
Term
Let's talk about jugular venous waveforms. What do the wave points (A wave, X descent, C wave, V wave, Y descent) correspond to?
Definition
A wave: atrial contraction
X descent: atrial relaXation
C wave: tricuspid valve closure (blood backs up from R atrium into jugular)
V wave: atrial filling (ventricular contraction)
Y descent: tricuspid opening
Term
Where should the normal jugular be visible? What happens in fluid overload?
Definition
In lower 1/3 of neck. With fluid overload (congestion), it is visible higher up the neck (represents increased left atrial pressure)
Term
What does a pronounced jugular A wave represent?
Definition
Incompliant RV (increased atrial afterload, so blood backs up up the jugular).
Term
What does a pronounced jugular V wave represent?
Definition
Tricuspid regurg. (V wave is atrial filling during ventricular contraction, so if valve is incompetent, extra blood is going back to atrium and increasing jugular pressure.
Term
What is hepatojugular reflux and how is it used to assess cardiac function?
Definition
Cranial abdominal pressure -> increased venous return to RA
Normal response: minimal JV elevation, immediate return to normal
Persistently elevated or slow return (positive reflux) with R heart disease
Term
Where do you normally hear the apex beat (cardiac impulse), and what do variations signify?
Definition
Left ventral thorax, at left 5th ICS just behind costochondral junction. It should be stronger on left than right side. Caudal displacement suggests hypertrophy. Louder on R than L suggests right side hypertrophy.
Term
What is responsible for the palpable pulse?
Definition
Pulse pressure, i.e. the difference between systolic and diastolic pressure. Pulse is stronger when SV is greater.
Term
What are bounding pulses typical of?
Definition
Aortic insufficiency or PDA.
Term
What is pulsus parvus and what is it associated with?
Definition
Weak pulse. Decreased SV, severe cardiac dz, aortic stenosis, arterial obstruction.
Term
What is pulsus alternans and what does it mean?
Definition
Alternating strong and weak pulse beats (corresponding to up and down SV); usually assoc. with myocardial disfunction or tachyarrythmias resulting in reduced filling.
Term
What is a bigeminal pulse?
Definition
Strong/weak alternating beats, usually from premature beats.
Term
What is pulsus paradoxus?
Definition
Decreased pulse pressure on inspiration, from cardiac tamponade.
Term
What is pulsus tardus?
Definition
Late-rising pulse due to aortic stenosis (delayed blood emptying through stenosis).
Term
What are the diaphragm and bell of the stethoscope best for?
Definition
Diaphragm: high-frequency sounds (murmurs)
Bell: Low-freq. sounds (normal beats, gallops)
Term
Where do you listen for valve sounds?
Definition
P: 2nd ICS: well under the elbow
A: 3rd ICS: at point of elbow
M: 4th ICS: just caudal to elbow
T: 3rd/4th ICS on right
Term
What is heart sound 1 and what does it correspond to?
Definition
"Lub." Closure of AV valves.
May be split in normal animals (left/right), esp. larger ones with slower HRs. May be pathologically split with poor LV/RV synchrony, e.g. bundle branch block.
Louder under hyperdynamic conditions, softer with increased HR, reduced systolic function (DCM or cardiac tamponade) and shock.
Term
What is heart sound 2 and what does it correspond to?
Definition
"Dup." Closure of semilunar valves.
May be split in normal animals (aortic then pulmonary, since RV ejection takes longer than left), esp. larger ones with slower HRs. Split is accentuated on inspiration. Can be heard loudest over pulm. and aortic valves.
Term
What is nocturnal dyspnea characteristic of?
Definition
LCHF
Term
What can cause sudden onset of dyspnea?
Definition
PTE, heartworm dz, spontaneous pneumothorax, "flash" pulmonary edema, severe anxiety.
Term
What must the reduction in SaO2 be before cyanosis is seen?
Definition
<85-90% (thus cyanosis is an insensitive indicator of hypoxemia)
Term
What is the definition of central (vs. peripheral) cyanosis?
Definition
Central affects skin and mucous membranes, whereas peripheral affects one local area.
Term
What does differential cyanosis look like, and what is it virtually pathognomonic for?
Definition
Cranial mucous membranes pink, caudal ones cyanotic. Points to PDA. May have to exercise animal to see this finding.
Term
What are PE findings with RCHF (or biventricular failure)?
Definition
Hepatomegaly
Ascites
Pleural effusion
...along with some evidence of heart disease.
Term
How can you differentiate syncopy from a seizure?
Definition
Loss of consciousness due to syncopy (transient interruption of blood flow to the brain) is over soon and recovery is rapid; no post-ictal phase as with seizures.
Term
What is CVP and how is it measured? What is normal?
Definition
Central venous pressure, estimated by the height of the jugular pulse above the thoracic inlet (plus 1-4 cm depending on size of dog for distance btw thoracic inlet and right atrium), should normally be 3-5 mmHg.
Term
What can cause a "giant A wave"?
Definition
1. Incompliant right ventricle (hypertrophic ventricle due to pulmonary hypertension, pulmonic stenosis, pulmonary obstruction or tricuspid stenosis, although this is rare).
2. Atrium contracting against a closed tricuspid valve (i.e. atrial/ventricular asynchrony)
Term
What grade murmur may be felt as a thrill?
Definition
V or VI out of VI.
Term
What is paradoxical splitting of the S2 sound?
Definition
The aortic valve, which normally closes slightly before the pulmonic valve, experiences delayed closure due to, perhaps, systemic hypertension or aortic stenosis, and closes AFTER the pulmonary valve.
Term
What is the definition of a gallop?
Definition
Abnormal diastolic sound.
Term
How can you accentuate a gallop during a PE?
Definition
Pressure on the cranial abdomen results in increased venous return, which tends to magnify gallops.
Term
What does an S4 gallop suggest?
Definition
Ventricular hypertrophy. Incompliant ventricle results in sudden deceleration of blood entering from atrium.
Term
When is an S3 sound heard, and what does an S3 gallop suggest?
Definition
Heard at the end of rapid ventricular filling (during diastole). Indicates a large, dilated, failing ventricle.
Term
What is a summation gallop?
Definition
S3 and S4 overlap. Perhaps separately they were too quiet to be heard, but summed together they are loud enough to identify. May be pathologic, but may be normal. If the summation gallop comes and goes as heart rate varies, it's probably an artifact of overlapping heart events (more common in cats, since their HR is higher)....i.e. not pathologic.
Term
What shape does a holosystolic murmur have on a phonocardiogram? What is it characteristic of?
Definition
Plateau from S1 to S2.
Characteristic of AV regurg or ventricular septal defect. (aka regurgitant murmur)
Term
What shape does an ejection murmur have on a phonocardiogram? What is it characteristic of?
Definition
Diamond shape (crescendo, decrescendo) between S1 and S2.
Characteristic of aortic or pulmonic stenosis or ventricular septal defect.
Term
What shape does a diastolic murmur have on a phonocardiogram? What is it characteristic of?
Definition
Triangle pointing to right with base at S1, point at S2 (decrescendo).
Characteristic of semilunar insufficiency.
Term
What is a continuous murmur?
Definition
It is heard all the time (obliterates ALL normal heart sounds).
Term
What does AV valve stenosis look like on a phonocardiogram?
Definition
A mid-diastolic and pre-systolic murmur: a decrescendo beginning at S3, and a crescendo ending at S1.
Term
What effect would hypertension have on regurgitant vs. ejection murmurs? How about hypotension?
Definition
Regurgitant murmurs would get louder, while ejection murmurs would decrease. Opposite with hypotension.
Term
Where is a mitral insufficiency murmur best ausculted?
Definition
Left ventricular apex.
Term
Where is a mitral insufficiency murmur best ausculted?
Definition
Left ventricular apex.
Term
Where is a tricuspid insufficiency murmur best ausculted?
Definition
Over tricuspid valve (right 4th ICS).
Term
Where is a ventricular septal defect murmur best ausculted?
Definition
Over tricuspid valve (right 4th ICS).
Term
What is the most common cause of a diastolic murmur?
Definition
Aortic regurgitation. Pulmonic regurg or AV stenosis would cause a similar murmur but are uncommon.
Term
Define murmur grades.
Definition
I: soft: only heard at one location with difficulty in absence of extraneous noise.
II: soft, heard readily at a specific location (such as single ICS), perhaps with mild spreading of PMI (point of max intensity)
III: medium; heard readily across say 2 ICSs; possibly also on opposite side of thorax.
IV: medium; readily auscultable on both sides of thorax. No thrill.
V: loud; with thrill on one side of thorax.
VI: loud; thrill on both sides of thorax. Audible with stethoscope lifted off thorax.
Term
Are diastolic murmurs common in dogs and cats?
Definition
No. They can be caused by AV stenosis.
Term
Where is an S3 gallop best heard?
Definition
PMI usually at left apex. Low "thud" best heard with bell.
Term
Are S3 and S4 sounds normal or abnormal?
Definition
Pathologic in small animals; can be normal in large.
Term
Where is an S4 gallop best heard?
Definition
Left apex
Term
Can an animal in atrial fib have an S4?
Definition
No, because S4 is due to deceleration of blood in the ventricle following atrial kick.
Term
What abnormal heart sounds can iatrogenic fluid overload cause?
Definition
S3 and S4.
Term
What is the midsystolic click caused by?
Definition
Mitral valve prolapse ("twanging" of elongated chordae tendinae).
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