Title: Trevor L. Jenkins, M.D.
15/14/2014 CV Board Review
- Trevor L. Jenkins, M.D.
- UH Harrington Heart Vascular Institute
- Institute for Transformative Molecular Medicine
- University Hospitals Case Medical Center
- Case Western Reserve School of Medicine
2Question 1
- A 45-year-old woman is evaluated in the emergency
department for acute severe shortness of breath.
She has a history of mitral valve prolapse for
more than 30 years. Before today, she has been
able to swim for 1 hour without symptoms. Two
hours ago while moving furniture she experienced
acute dyspnea and chest discomfort. She has had
no fever or chills. - Physical examination shows a thin woman with
labored breathing. Temperature is 37.2 C (99.0
F), blood pressure is 115/76 mm Hg, heart rate
is 120/min and regular, and respiration rate is
20/min. Oxygen saturation is 88 on ambient air.
There is no jugular venous distention, and
carotid upstrokes are brisk. The apical impulse
is not displaced. S1 is reduced and there is a
grade 2/6 early systolic murmur at the apex with
radiation to the back. An S3 is present. Her
lungs have bilateral crackles. Extremities are
cool. - Electrocardiogram shows sinus tachycardia and
prominent QRS voltage. Chest radiograph shows
normal cardiac size and pulmonary edema. Urgent
transthoracic echocardiogram shows normal left
and right ventricular size and systolic function,
left ventricular ejection fraction of 70, and
partial flail of the anterior mitral valve
leaflet with severe mitral regurgitation. The
left atrium is not dilated and no other valve
abnormalities are detected.
3Question 1
- In addition to supplemental oxygen and diuretic
therapy, which of the following is the most
appropriate next treatment of this patient? - Captopril
- Esmolol
- Mitral Valve surgery
- Vancomycin and gentimicin after blood cultures
are drawn
4Question 1
Stout, Circ 20091193232
5Question 1
6Question 2
- A 42-year-old woman is evaluated in the emergency
department for progressive shortness of breath
for 3 weeks. Medical history is noncontributory.
She takes no medications. - On physical examination, temperature is 37.4 C
(99.3 F), blood pressure is 112/64 mm Hg, pulse
rate is 62/min, and respiration rate is 20/min.
Estimated central venous pressure and carotid
upstrokes are normal. Cardiac auscultation
discloses an opening snap, a grade 2/6 diastolic
low-pitched murmur at the apex, and a grade 2/6
holosystolic murmur at the apex radiating to the
axilla. - Electrocardiogram demonstrates sinus tachycardia,
left atrial enlargement, and right axis
deviation. Transthoracic echocardiogram
demonstrates normal biventricular size and
function a dilated left atrium reduced
posterior mitral leaflet excursion without
leaflet calcification or significant thickening
severe mitral stenosis with mean gradient 15 mm
Hg mild mitral regurgitation and mild tricuspid
regurgitation. Estimated pulmonary artery
systolic pressure is 58 mm Hg.
7Question 2
- Which of the following is the most appropriate
treatment? - Balloon mitral valvuloplasty
- Metoprolol
- Mitral Valve replacement
- Open surgical commissurotomy
8Question 2
9Question 2
10Question 3
- A 72-year-old man is evaluated in the emergency
department for worsening shortness of breath for
several weeks, orthopnea, and bilateral lower
extremity edema. He has had chest heaviness with
exertion, but no presyncope or syncope. - Physical examination shows a diaphoretic man in
mild distress. Blood pressure is 118/74 mm Hg,
pulse rate is 96/min, respiration rate is 20/min.
Oxygen saturation is 88 on ambient air.
Estimated central venous pressure is 10 cm H2O.
There is a regular rhythm and S2 is diminished in
intensity. There is a grade 3/6 late-peaking
systolic murmur at the left lower sternal border.
An S3 is audible. Lung examination demonstrates
bibasilar crackles. There is bilateral lower
extremity edema to the knees. - Chest radiograph shows cardiomegaly and increased
bilateral interstitial markings. - Electrocardiogram shows sinus rhythm and left
ventricular hypertrophy. Transthoracic
echocardiogram shows left ventricular dilatation
with mild concentric hypertrophy. The ejection
fraction is 30 with global hypocontractility.
The aortic valve leaflets are thickened with
reduced mobility and severe calcification. The
aortic valve peak instantaneous gradient is 54 mm
Hg and mean gradient is 38 mm Hg. The calculated
aortic valve area is 0.8 cm2. - The patient is treated with intravenous
furosemide with symptomatic improvement in
dyspnea and oxygen saturation.
11Question 3
- Which of the following is the most appropriate
treatment for this patient? - Balloon aortic valvuloplasty
- Intravenous nitroprusside
- Surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR)
- Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR)
12Question 3
- Factors supporting SAVR
- Severe aortic stenosis (Valve area lt 1.0 cm2)
- Left ventricular dysfunction
- Symptomatic patient
- CHF
- Exertional chest pain
- Syncope
- Low operative risk
13Question 4
- A 63-year-old man is evaluated for pleuritic
left-sided anterior chest pain, which has
persisted intermittently for 1 week. The pain
lasts for hours at a time and is not provoked by
exertion or relieved by rest but is worse when
supine. He reports transient relief with
acetaminophen and codeine and occasionally when
leaning forward. He has had a low-grade fever for
3 days, without cough or chills. Medical history
is significant for acute pericarditis 7 months
ago. He was treated at that time with ibuprofen
and had rapid resolution of his symptoms. His
only current medications are acetaminophen and
codeine. - On physical examination, temperature is 37.8 C
(100.0 F), blood pressure is 132/78 mm Hg, pulse
rate is 98/min, and respiration rate is 16/min.
No jugular venous distention is noted. A
two-component pericardial friction rub is heard
over the left side of the sternum. Pulsus
paradoxus of 6 mm Hg is noted. Lung auscultation
reveals normal breath sounds with no wheezing. No
pedal edema is present. - Electrocardiogram demonstrates sinus rhythm and
no ST-segment shift.
14Question 4
- Which of the following is the most appropriate
management? - Azathioprine
- Chest CT
- Colchicine and aspirin
- Pericardiectomy
- Prednisone
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15Question 4
- COPE (COlchicine for acute Pericarditis) trial.
- Imazio, Circ 20051122012
- 120 patients assigned to ASA vs ASA Colchicine
for first episode of acute pericarditis - Colchicine decreased the recurrence rate at 18
months (10.7 vs 32.3, P .004, NNT 5) and
symptoms at 72 hours (11.7 vs 36.7, P .003).
Corticosteroid use was an independent risk factor
for recurrence. Colchicine stopped in 5 cases for
GI intolerance. - CORE (COlchicine for REcurrent pericarditis)
trial. - Imazio, Arch Intern Med 20051651967
- 84 patient assigned to ASA vs ASA Colchicine
for recurrent episode of acute pericarditis - Colchicine decreased the recurrence rate (24.0
vs 50.6, P .02, NNT 4) and symptoms at 72
hours (10 vs 31, P .03). In multivariate
analysis, prior corticosteroid use was an
independent predictor of further recurrent
pericarditis
16Question 5
- A 68-year-old woman is evaluated for
palpitations. Her symptoms occur daily during
both rest and exertion. She describes the
palpitations as intermittent hard beats that
take her breath away. Her symptoms are made
worse by caffeine consumption. She reports no
dizziness or syncope. Medical history is
significant for hypertension and hyperlipidemia.
Medications are an ACE inhibitor and a statin. - On physical examination, she is afebrile, blood
pressure is 138/80 mm Hg, pulse rate is 83/min,
and respiration rate is 18/min. On cardiac
examination, the rhythm is regular. There are no
murmurs or extra sounds. The lungs are clear. The
remainder of the general physical examination is
normal. - The electrocardiogram shows normal sinus rhythm
with minor ST-segment abnormalities.
17Question 5
- Which is the most appropriate testing option to
utilize next in this patient? - Electrophysiology study
- 24 hour continuous ambulatory electrocardiographic
monitor - Implantable loop recorder
- Post-symptom event recorder
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18Question 5
- For patients with palpitations that occur on a
daily basis, 24- or 48-hour continuous ambulatory
electrocardiographic monitoring is appropriate to
correlate symptoms with heart rhythm. - Patient describes PVC events
- A PVC is followed by a compensatory pause, often
described by patients as a skipped beat. - PVCs are often caused or made worse by agents
such as caffeine, alcohol, and nicotine.
19Question 6
- A 68-year-old woman is seen for an evaluation.
Medical history is significant for ischemic
cardiomyopathy and hypertension. She had an
implantable cardioverter-defibrillator placed 5
years ago. She has good functional capacity and
is able to walk three blocks without limitations.
Medications are lisinopril, carvedilol, aspirin,
and pravastatin. - On physical examination, she is afebrile, blood
pressure is 137/70 mm Hg, pulse rate is 82/min,
and respiration rate is 18/min. BMI is 23. The
remainder of the examination is normal.
Laboratory studies Laboratory studies
Hemoglobin A1c 6.9
Total cholesterol 115 mg/dL (2.98 mmol/L)
LDL cholesterol 53 mg/dL (1.37 mmol/L)
HDL cholesterol 40 mg/dL (1.04 mmol/L)
Triglycerides 112 mg/dL (1.27 mmol/L)
20Question 6
- Which of the following clinical measures is most
important to target in this patient to reduce her
risk of a cardiovascular event? - Blood pressure
- Hemoglobin A1c
- LDL cholesterol level
- Triglyceride level
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21Question 6
- The American Heart Association recommends
targeting a blood pressure reduction to less than
130/80 mm Hg in patients with coronary heart
disease (CHD) or a CHD risk equivalent (carotid
disease, peripheral vascular disease, abdominal
aortic aneurysm) and to below 120/80 mm Hg for
those with heart failure or a left ventricular
ejection fraction below 40. - There is no benefit to strict glycemic control on
the impact of macrovascular disease. For most
patients, a reasonable goal is a hemoglobin A1c
value of 7.0 or below. - In patients with a high risk of a cardiovascular
event, LDL cholesterol levels should be treated
aggressively with lipid-lowering therapy with a
target LDL goal of below 100 mg/dL (2.59 mmol/L),
with a reasonable goal of further reduction to
below 70 mg/dL (1.81 mmol/L) in patients at very
high risk.
22Question 7
- A 65-year-old man asks for advice on cardiac risk
assessment during a routine evaluation. He is
asymptomatic, does not smoke cigarettes, has no
pertinent medical or family history, and takes no
medications. - On physical examination, blood pressure is 148/90
mm Hg, pulse rate is 83/min, and respiration rate
is 18/min. The remainder of the physical
examination is normal. The patient's Framingham
risk score predicts a 15 chance of a myocardial
infarction or coronary death in the next 10
years.
Laboratory studies Laboratory studies
Total cholesterol 217 mg/dL (5.62 mmol/L)
LDL cholesterol 125 mg/dL (3.24 mmol/L)
HDL cholesterol 48 mg/dL (1.24 mmol/L)
Triglycerides 269 mg/dL (3.04 mmol/L)
23Question 7
- Which of the following is the most appropriate
test to perform next? - B-type natriuretic peptide
- Cardiac CT angiography
- High-sensitivity C-reactive protein
- Stress echocardiography
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24Question 7
- Measurement of hsCRP has been demonstrated to be
clinically useful for guiding primary prevention
strategies in persons with an intermediate risk
of future cardiovascular events (Framingham risk
score of 10-20), with up to 30 of these
patients reclassified as either low risk or high
risk based on hsCRP measurement. - The JUPITER trial tested the hypothesis that
healthy middle-aged and older persons with
elevated hsCRP but without elevated LDL
cholesterol (lt130 mg/dL 3.37 mmol/L) would
benefit from statin treatment. Statin treatment
was associated with lowering of median LDL
cholesterol level from 108 to 55 mg/dL (2.80 to
1.42 mmol/L, 50 reduction) and median hsCRP
level from 0.42 to 0.22 mg/dL (4.2 to 2.2 mg/L,
37 reduction). The JUPITER trial was terminated
early after a median follow-up of 1.9 years
because of reduction in the primary end point
rate (incidence of a first major cardiovascular
event) from 1.36 to 0.77 per 100 patient-years of
follow-up. The absolute reduction was relatively
small at 1.2.
25Question 8
- A 61-year-old man is evaluated during a follow-up
examination. He has a 4-year history of atrial
fibrillation and underwent atrial fibrillation
ablation 6 months ago. He has had no symptoms of
palpitations, fatigue, shortness of breath, or
presyncope since the procedure. He has
hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Medications are lisinopril, atenolol, metformin,
and warfarin. - Blood pressure is 124/82 mm Hg and pulse rate is
72/min. Cardiac examination discloses regular
rate and rhythm. The rest of the physical
examination is normal. - Electrocardiogram demonstrates normal sinus
rhythm.
26Question 8
- Which of the following is the most appropriate
treatment? - Continue warfarin
- Switch to aspirin
- Switch to clopidogrel
- Switch to aspirin and clopidogrel
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27Question 8
- Warfarin should be continued in this patient. For
the first 2 to 3 months after an atrial
fibrillation ablation, all patients should take
warfarin. The best management strategy thereafter
is to provide anticoagulation as if the ablation
did not occur, using a tool such as the CHADS2
score to risk stratify. Although the patient has
had no symptoms of atrial fibrillation since his
ablation procedure, patients may have either
asymptomatic episodes or a symptomatic recurrence
of atrial fibrillation after the ablation and can
be at risk for stroke. This patient has
hypertension and diabetes mellitus and a CHADS2
score of 2 (4.0 risk of stroke per year). - CHADS2 score 1 point CHF (EF lt35), DM, HTN,
Age gt 75 2 points CVA/TIA
28Question 8
Annual Stroke Risk Annual Stroke Risk Annual Stroke Risk
CHADS2 Score Stroke Risk 95 CI
0 1.9 1.23.0
1 2.8 2.03.8
2 4.0 3.15.1
3 5.9 4.67.3
4 8.5 6.311.1
5 12.5 8.217.5
6 18.2 10.527.4
29Question 9
- A 62-year-old woman is awaiting a procedure in
the presurgical area. She has a single-chamber
implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) and
is about to undergo a hemicolectomy for colon
cancer. Medical history is pertinent for ischemic
cardiomyopathy, chronic atrial fibrillation,
complete heart block, and pacemaker dependence.
Medications are aspirin, carvedilol, lisinopril,
digoxin, warfarin (withheld), and rosuvastatin.
Perioperative anticoagulation is provided with
unfractionated heparin.
30Question 9
- Which of the following is the most appropriate
perioperative management of the patient's ICD? - Insert a temporary pacemaker
- Place a magnet over the ICD
- Turn shock therapy off and change to asynchronous
mode - No programming changes need to ICD
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