valvular heart disease

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Valvular Heart Disease. NPN 200 Medical Surgical I. Types. Mitral Stenosis Mitral Regurgitation Mitral Valve Prolapse Aortic Stenosis Aortic regurgitation Tricuspid valve is affected infrequently Tricuspid stenosis – causes Rt HF Tricuspid regurgitation –causes venous overload. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Valvular Heart Disease

NPN 200Medical Surgical I

Types

• Mitral Stenosis• Mitral Regurgitation• Mitral Valve Prolapse• Aortic Stenosis• Aortic regurgitation• Tricuspid valve is affected infrequently

– Tricuspid stenosis – causes Rt HF– Tricuspid regurgitation –causes venous

overload

Tricuspid Valve

Rheumatic Heart Disease

• Inflammatory process that may affect the myocardium, pericardium and or endocardium

• Usually results in distortion and scarring of the valves

Rheumatic Heart Disease, cont.

• Subjective symptoms– Prior history of

rheumatic fever– General malaise– Pain – may or may

not be present

• Objective symptoms– Temperature – Murmurs– Dyspnea– polyarthritis

Rheumatic Heart Disease

• Diagnosis– H/P– WBC and ESR– C-reactive protein– Cardiac enzymes– EKG– Chest x-ray– Echo– Cardiac cath– Cardiac output

Rheumatic Heart Disease

• Nursing Care– Vital signs– Rest and quiet environment– Give antibiotics, digitalis, and diuretics– Provide adequate nutrition– Monitor I/O– Explain treatment and home care

Mitral Stenosis• Usually results from rheumatic carditis• Is a thickening by fibrosis or calcification• Can be caused by tumors, calcium and thrombus • Valve leaflets fuse and become stiff and the

cordae tendineae contract• These narrows the opening and prevents normal

blood flow from the LA to the LV• LA pressure increases, left atrium dilates, PAP

increases, and the RV hypertrophies• Pulmonary congestion and right sided heart

failure occurs• Followed by decreased preload and CO decreases

Mitral Stenosis, cont.

• Mild – asymptomatic• With progression – dyspnea, orthopneas,

dry cough, hemoptysis, and pulmonary edema may appear as hypertension and congestion progresses

• Right sided heart failure symptoms occur later

• S/S– Pulse may be normal to A-Fib– Apical diastolic murmur is heard

Mitral Regurgitation• Primarily caused by rheumatic heart disease, but

may be caused by papillary muscle rupture form congenital, infective endocarditis or ischemic heart disease

• Abnormality prevents the valve from closing• Blood flows back into the right atrium during

systole• During diastole the regurg output flows into the

LV with the normal blood flow and increases the volume into the LV

• Progression is slowly – fatigue, chronic weakness, dyspnea, anxiety, palpitations

• May have A-fib and changes of LV failure• May develop right sided failure as well

Mitral Valve Prolapse

• Cause is variable and may be associated with congenital defects

• More common in women• Valvular leaflets enlarge and prolapse into

the LA during systole• Most are asymptomatic• Some may report chest pain, palpitations

or exercise intolerance• May have dizziness, syncope and

palpitations associated with dysrhythmias• May have audible click and murmur

Aortic Stenosis• Valve becomes stiff and fibrotic, impeding blood flow with

LV contraction• Results in LV hypertrophy, increased O2 demands, and

pulmonary congestion• Causes – rheumatic fever, congenital, arthrosclerosis• Atherosclerosis and calcification is primary cause in the

elderly• Complications – right sided heart failure, pulmonary edema,

and A-fib• S/S – Early: dyspnea, angina, syncope Late: marked fatigue, debilitation, and

peripheral cyanosis, crescendo- decrescendo murmur is heard

Aortic Regurgitation• Aortic valve leaflets do not close properly during diastole• The valve ring that attaches to the leaflets may be dilated,

loose, or deformed• The ventricle dilates to accommodate the ^ blood volume

and hypertrophies• Causes: infective endocarditis, congenital, hypertension,

Marfan’s • May remain asymptomatic for years• Develop dyspnea, orthopnea, palpitations, ,and angina• May have ^ systolic pressure with bounding pulse• Have a high pitch, blowing, decrescendo diastolic murmur

Assessment for Valve Dysfunction

• Subjective symptoms– Fatigue– Weakness– General malaise– Dyspnea on exertion– Dizziness– Chest pain or discomfort– Weight gain – Prior history of rheumatic heart disease

Assessment, cont.

• Objective symptoms– Orthopnea– Dyspnea, rales– Pink-tinged sputum– Murmurs– Palpitations– Cyanosis, capillary refill– Edema– Dysrhythmias– Restlessness

Diagnosis

• History and physical findings• EKG• Chest x-ray• Cardiac cath• Echocardiogram

Medial Treatment

• Nonsurgical management focuses on drug therapy and rest

• Diuretic, beta blockers, digoxin, O2, vasodilators, prophylactic antibiotic therapy

• Manage A-fib, if develops, with conversion if possible, and use of anticoagulation

Interventions

• Assess vitals, heart sounds, adventitious breath sounds

• ^ HOB• O2 as prescribed• Emotional support• Give medications• I/O• Weight• Check for edema• Explain disease process, provide for home care

with O2, medications

Surgical Management of Valve Disease

• Mitral Valve– Commissurotomy – Mitral Valve Replacement– Balloon Valvuloplasty

• Aortic Valve Replacement

Mechanical Valve

Mechanical Valve

Porcine Valve

Tissue Valve

Tissue Valve

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