Cardiovascular Review
Cardiovascular Review
Approaching a patient with hypertension (HTN)
- Determine if the patient has HTN?
- Contributing factors:
- Non-compliance with daily medication
- Taking drugs that cause HTN (herbal medicine, traditional medicine, licorice)
- High salt intake, stress
- Causes:
- Secondary HTN:
- Common: COPD, sleep apnea syndrome, kidney disease, medication and alcohol
- Less common: Cushing’s syndrome, thyroid disease, primary aldosteronism, adrenal medulla/cortex tumor
- Are there target organ damages?
- Brain: Stroke signs (FAST), findings of neurological localization
- Blood vessels: Aortic dissection (severe chest pain), acute pulmonary edema (severe dyspnea, pink frothy sputum, …)
- Eyes: Blurred vision
- Heart: Triad of dyspnea, left chest pain, findings on examination
- Kidney: Oliguria, foamy urine, hematuria
- Cardiovascular risk factors:
- Non-modifiable: Age, gender, economic level, sleep apnea, pre-existing chronic kidney disease, family history, stress
- Modifiable: Diabetes mellitus, smoking, dyslipidemia, overweight, obesity, unhealthy diet, lack of physical activity
- HTN staging according to AHA 2017:
- Normal: <120 and <80 mmHg
- Elevated: 120 – 129 and < 80 mmHg
- Stage 1: 120 – 139 and/or 80 – 89 mmHg
- Stage 2: > 140 and/or > 90 mmHg
- HTN staging according to ESH 2018:
- Optimal: < 120 and < 80 mmHg
- Normal: 120 – 129 and/or 80 – 84 mmHg
- High-normal: 130 – 139 and/or 85 – 89 mmHg
- Grade I: 140 – 159 and/or 90 – 99 mmHg
- Grade II: 160 – 179 and/or 100 – 109 mmHg
- Grade III: > 180 and/or > 110 mmHg
Approaching a patient with dyspnea
- Is there true dyspnea?
- Dyspnea classification:
- Contributing factors:
- Causes:
- Cardiovascular: Coronary syndrome, heart failure, acute cardiac tamponade
- Respiratory: Upper respiratory syndrome, tracheitis/bronchospasm, pulmonary embolism, asthma, COPD, pneumothorax, pleural effusion, pneumonia
- Neurological – Muscular disease: Phrenic nerve disorders, mitochondrial diseases, polymyositis
- NYHA heart failure staging:
- Class I: Normal physical activity
- Class II: Slight limitation of physical activity (decreased frequency of daily work due to fatigue)
- Class III: Marked limitation (mild exertion causes fatigue)
- Class IV: Fatigue and discomfort even at rest
Approaching a patient with chest pain
- Is there true chest pain?
- Chest pain classification:
- Causes:
- Chest wall: Costochondritis, herpes zoster
- Cardiovascular: Pericarditis, myocarditis, coronary artery disease, aortic dissection, pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension
- Respiratory: Pleuritis, pneumothorax, asthma, COPD, lung cancer
Well’s score
- Signs of deep vein thrombosis in lower extremities:
- Leg swelling, tenderness to palpation (3 points)
- Previous history of DVT, pulmonary embolism (1.5 points)
- Immobilization > 3 days or surgery > 4 days (1.5 points)
- Tachycardia (>100 bpm): (1.5 points)
- Hemoptysis: (1 point)
- Malignancy: (1 point)
- When other diagnoses are less likely than pulmonary embolism: (3 points)
Killip staging in acute myocardial infarction (AMI)
- Class I: No signs of left ventricular failure
- Class II: Rales < 1/2 lung, jugular vein distention, possible gallop T3
- Class III: Acute pulmonary edema
- Class IV: Cardiogenic shock
Murmur characteristics:
- Location:
- Timing:
- Shape:
- Intensity:
- Quality:
- Radiation:
- Carvallo’s maneuver:
Note:
- This article is only an overview and is not exhaustive.
- For more detailed information, please consult professional literature or a specialist physician.
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