id pressure waveforms

31
1 Cardiac Pressure I Cardiac Pressure I Image Image identification identification Identify the 30 Identify the 30 hemodynamic slides, with hemodynamic slides, with the artifacts, problems, the artifacts, problems, and pathology shown. and pathology shown. After you identify the problem, explanations are provided. By Wes Todd

Upload: tersue86

Post on 07-May-2015

5.726 views

Category:

Health & Medicine


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Id Pressure Waveforms

1

Cardiac Pressure I Cardiac Pressure I Image Image

identificationidentification

Identify the 30 hemodynamic Identify the 30 hemodynamic slides, with the artifacts, slides, with the artifacts, problems, and pathology problems, and pathology

shown.shown.After you identify the problem, explanations are provided.

By Wes Todd

Page 2: Id Pressure Waveforms

2

2. What 3 hemodynamic problems are seen during this coronary injection?

Transient hypotension, bradycardia & ST depression characteristic of right coronary injection using old style high osmolar contrast.

LCA injection causes ST elevation.

Page 3: Id Pressure Waveforms

3

Con

3. Name this pathology.

Constrictive pericarditis.

Note the diastolic pressure equality along with a square root sign. The systolic pressure variation varies by 20 mmHg = Pulsus Paradoxus.

Page 4: Id Pressure Waveforms

4

Same Pt. as previous slide

4. What are the negative LV spikes?

LV LV

“y” waves or square root sign. There is diastolic pressure equality of all pressures (even with positive intrathoracic pressure shown at left). This is Constrictive Pericarditis.

Page 5: Id Pressure Waveforms

55. Read this RV (List 3 numbers).

Read at plateau 40/ 11, 13.

Computer reading grossly underestimates these pressure. They should never be negative. RV with marked respiratory variation.

Page 6: Id Pressure Waveforms

66. What pressure is this?

PA with respiratory variation. Distinct dicrotic notch. Disregard premature beat. (AF ?)

Read as 33/19, 23 mmHg.

Page 7: Id Pressure Waveforms

77. Name this pathology.

Pulmonary Valvular Stenosis.

PA pressure grossly distorted with systolic vibrations possibly due to turbulence in PA. 50 mm PP gradient.

Page 8: Id Pressure Waveforms

88. Name this congenital pathology.

AS with PDA.

Catheter pulls back from LV-AO (with35 mm gradient) then through PDA, into PA (with 13 mm gradient) and finally into RV.

Page 9: Id Pressure Waveforms

99. Name this pathology.

V waves on wedge suggest Mitral Regurgitation.

Note how the PA dicrotic notch is exaggerated by V waves. Severe MR waves may be transmitted all the way back into the lung bed, and through it into the PA.

Page 10: Id Pressure Waveforms

10

10. Name this pathology, seen during coronary angiography.

Ventricularization.

Shows characteristic diastolic upsloping with occasional “a” waves.

Probable widowmaker lesion in Main LCA.

Page 11: Id Pressure Waveforms

1111. What causes this problem?

Reverse aortic gradient. (normal)

Peripheral amplification in AO.

Page 12: Id Pressure Waveforms

1212. Name this pathology.

HOCM. Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy (old term IHSS)

Subvalvular LV gradient 100 mmHg.

Page 13: Id Pressure Waveforms

13

13. Name the 3 chambers seen in this pullback.

PA, RV & wedge. Pulmonary hypertension with systolic RV of 42 mmHg. (Average out resonant peak)

PA systolic is 36 mmHg. Could be PS, or more likely just respiratory variation.

Same as previous patient.

30

60

Page 14: Id Pressure Waveforms

14

14. Name the congenital pathology seen in this Rt. Ht. pullback.

PA-RV pullback showing pulmonary valve stenosis.

RV hypertension of 70 mmHg. Probable peripheral edema with RV edp of 20 mmHg.

Page 15: Id Pressure Waveforms

1515. Why is #2 higher than #1?

AO & peripheral aorta (femoral sheath) showing peripheral amplification of 20 mmHg.

Do not use this spiked peripheral artery when measuring critical pressures like AS gadient.

Page 16: Id Pressure Waveforms

16

16. This type of arterial pulse is termed pulsus ______.

Pulsus Tardus.

Tardus means slow or delayed upstroke. Also, note the anacrotic notch on upstroke, characteristic of AS. 44 mmHg peak-peak gradient.

If the pulse were reduced in amplitude it would also be termed “Pulsus Parvus.”

Page 17: Id Pressure Waveforms

17

Aortic Regurgitation.

Corrigan’s wide pulse pressure (low diastole).

17. Name this pathology.

Page 18: Id Pressure Waveforms

1818. Name this pathology.

Coarctation of aorta with 30 mmHg peak-peak gradient.

Slow pullback across coarct. Shows typical systolic gradient only.

Page 19: Id Pressure Waveforms

19

Ventricularized pressure above.

Note flat diastole with prominent “a” wave. Probable Left-Main coronary lesion.

During LCA angiography

19. What is the probable diagnosis?

Page 20: Id Pressure Waveforms

2020. Name this pathology.

Pulsus Bigeminus.

Bigeminy on ECG with alternating hi – low ventricular beats.

Page 21: Id Pressure Waveforms

2121. Why is the arterial pressure imroved?

Bradycardia & hypotension, corrected with ventricular pacemaker.

Note small ventricular spikes on ECG in last tracing.

Page 22: Id Pressure Waveforms

2222. Name this pathology.

Brockenbraugh’s sign of HOCM.

Post PVC compensatory pause causes increased filling, and increased preload. Frank-Starling law causes post PVC increased LV contraction with characteristically increased gradient.

Page 23: Id Pressure Waveforms

23

23. In order of their appearance, list the 4 chambers through which this Swan-Ganz passes.

RA, RV, PA, wedge

Swan-Ganz rapid float through. Not usually this concise.

Page 24: Id Pressure Waveforms

24

24. The BP (off screen) varies markedly with respiration. Name this pathology.

Cardiac Tamponade.

Diastolic equality of all pressures (except arterial). Arterial respiratory variation of more than 10 mmHg is Pulsus Paradoxus. No square root sign in PT.

Page 25: Id Pressure Waveforms

25

25. What is this procedure?

Pericardial centesis or “tap”, for pericardial tamponade.

Here blood is drawn off from hemo-pericardium due to possible trauma or catheter rupture of RV. Centesis is now usually done by placing a soft pigtail catheter in pericardium first.

Page 26: Id Pressure Waveforms

26

26. Name the atrial waves seen.

Biphasic atrial “c” waves due to atrial fibrillation. Computer miss-reads them thinking them to be “a” waves. Spiked “v” waves.

Wedge mean is elevated at 25 mmHg. RV hypertension 50 mmHg.

Page 27: Id Pressure Waveforms

2727. Name this ECG pathology.

Trigeminy. (Pulsus Trigeminus)

Every 3rd beat is a PVC with reduced arterial pressure.

Page 28: Id Pressure Waveforms

28

Damped coronary pressure.

Catheter “deep throat” in RCA. Diastole flat with pres-systolic dip.

During RCA angiography

28. What’s wrong with this coronary pressure?

Page 29: Id Pressure Waveforms

29

Resolution of VF into atrial fib.

Hypotensive BP returning towards normal.

29. Name this ECG pathology.

Page 30: Id Pressure Waveforms

30

Ventricularized / damped pressure above.

Reduced systole with decreased diastolic slope.

Probable Left-Main coronary lesion.

30. What’s wrong with the 1st coronary pressure above?

Page 31: Id Pressure Waveforms

31Developed & copyright by Wes Todd 2004

Additional pressure games found in Todd’s CV Review CD version 4 www.westodd.com