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Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

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Page 1: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Cardiac Pathology 2:Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart

Disease and other assorted stuff

Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Page 2: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Blood Vessels• Heart I• Heart II

Cardiac Pathology Outline

Page 3: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Blood Vessels• Heart I

• Heart Failure• Congenital Heart Disease• Ischemic Heart Disease• Hypertensive Heart Disease

Cardiac Pathology Outline

Page 4: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Blood Vessels• Heart I

• Heart Failure

Cardiac Pathology Outline

Page 5: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• End point of many heart diseases• Common!

• 5 million affected each year• 300,000 fatalities

• Most due to systolic dysfunction

• Some due to diastolic dysfunction, valve failure, or abnormal load

• Heart can’t pump blood fast enough to meet needs of body

Heart Failure

Page 6: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• System responds to failure by• Releasing hormones (e.g., norepinephrine)• Frank-Starling mechanism• Hypertrophy

• Initially, this works

• Eventually, it doesn’t• Myocytes degenerate• Heart needs more oxygen• Myocardium becomes vulnerable to ischemia

Heart Failure

Page 7: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

R L

Page 8: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Clinical consequences

of left and right heart failure

peripheral edema

ascites

hepatomegaly

cyanosis

pulmonary edema

splenomegaly

Page 9: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Left ventricle fails; blood backs up in lungs

• Commonest causes• Ischemic heart disease (IHD)• Systemic hypertension• Mitral or aortic valve disease• Primary heart diseases

• Heart changes• LV hypertrophy, dilation• LA may be enlarged too (risk of atrial fibrillation)

Left Heart Failure

Page 10: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Dyspnea

• Orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea too

• Enlarged heart, increased heart rate, fine rales at lung bases

• Later: mitral regurgitation, systolic murmur

• If atrium is big, “irregularly irregular” heartbeat

Left Heart Failure

Page 11: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Right ventricle fails; blood backs up in body

• Commonest causes• Left heart failure• Lung disease (“cor pulmonale”)• Some congenital heart diseases

• Heart changes• right ventricular hypertrophy, dilation• right atrial enlargement

Right Heart Failure

Page 12: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Peripheral edema• Big, congested liver (“nutmeg liver”)

• Big spleen

• Most chronic cases of heart failure are bilateral

Right Heart Failure

Page 13: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Hepatic blood flow

Page 14: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

“Nutmeg” liver Nutmeg

Page 15: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Blood Vessels• Heart I

• Heart Failure• Congenital Heart Disease

Cardiac Pathology Outline

Page 16: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Abnormalities of heart/great vessels present from birth

• Faulty embryogenesis, weeks 3-8• Broad spectrum of severity• Cause unknown in 90% of cases

Congenital Heart Disease

Page 17: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Left-to-right shunts• atrial septal defects• ventricular septal defects• Patent ductus arteriosus

• Right-to-left shunts• tetralogy of fallot• transposition of the great arteries

• Obstructions• aortic coarctation

Congenital Heart Disease

Page 18: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Initially, left-to-right shunt (asymptomatic)

• Eventually, pulmonary vessels may become constricted (“pulmonary hypertension”), leading to right-to-left shunt (“Eisenmenger syndrome”)

• Surgical repair prevents irreversible pulmonary changes and heart failure

Atrial Septal Defects

Page 19: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

ASD

Page 20: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Most common congenital cardiac anomaly

• Most close spontaneously in childhood

• Small VSD: asymptomatic

• Large VSD: big left-to-right shunt, may become right-to-left

Ventricular Septal Defects

Page 21: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

VSD

Page 22: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Ductus: allows flow from PA to aorta

• Closes spontaneously by day 1-2 of life

• Small PDA: asymptomatic

• Large PDA: shunt becomes right-to-left

Patent Ductus Arteriosus

Page 23: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

PDA

Page 24: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Most common cause of cyanotic congenital heart disease

• Four features:• VSD• obstruction to RV outflow tract• overriding aorta• RV hypertrophy

• Cyanosis, erythrocytosis, clubbing of fingertips, paradoxical emboli

Tetralogy of Fallot

Page 25: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Tetralogy of Fallot

Page 26: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Clubbing of fingertips

Page 27: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Normal (L) and clubbed (R) fingertips

Page 28: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Aorta arises from R ventricle; pulmonary artery arises from L ventricle

• Outcome: separation of systemic and pulmonary circulations

• Incompatible with life unless there is a big shunt (VSD)

Transposition of Great Arteries

Page 29: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Coarctation = narrowing

• “Infantile” (preductal) and “adult” (postductal) forms

• Cyanosis and/or low blood pressure in lower extremities

• Severity depends on degree of coarctation

Aortic Coarctation

Page 30: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Coarctation of the aorta

Page 31: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Blood Vessels• Heart I

• Heart Failure• Congenital Heart Disease• Ischemic Heart Disease

Cardiac Pathology Outline

Page 32: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Myocardial perfusion can’t meet demand

• Usually caused by decreased coronary artery blood flow (“coronary artery disease”)

• Four syndromes:• angina pectoris• acute MI• chronic IHD• sudden cardiac death

Ischemic Heart Disease

Page 33: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013
Page 34: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Intermittent chest pain caused by transient, reversible ischemia

• Typical (stable) angina• pain on exertion• fixed narrowing of coronary artery

• Prinzmetal (variant) angina• pain at rest• coronary artery spasm of unknown etiology

• Unstable (pre-infarction) angina• increasing pain with less exertion• plaque disruption and thrombosis

Angina Pectoris

Page 35: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Necrosis of heart muscle caused by ischemia

• 1.5 million people get MIs each year

• Most due to acute coronary artery thrombosis• sudden plaque disruption• platelets adhere• coagulation cascade activated• thrombus occludes lumen within minutes• irreversible injury/cell death in 20-40 minutes

• Prompt reperfusion can salvage myocardium

Myocardial Infarction

Page 36: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Time Gross changes Microscopic changes

0-4h None None

4-12h Mottling Coagulation necrosis

12-24h Mottling More coagulation necrosis; neutrophils come in

1-7 d Yellow infarct center Neutrophils die, macrophages come to eat dead cells

1-2 w Yellow center, red borders Granulation tissue

2-8 w Scar Collagen

Morphologic Changes in Myocardial Infarction

Page 37: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Acute Myocardial Infarction

Page 38: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

MI: day 1, day 3, day 7

Page 39: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Clinical features• Severe, crushing chest pain ± radiation• Not relieved by nitroglycerin, rest• Sweating, nausea, dyspnea• Sometimes no symptoms

• Laboratory evaluation• Troponins increase within 2-4 hours, remain

elevated for a week.• CK-MB increases within 2-4 hours, returns to

normal within 72 hours.

Myocardial Infarction

Page 40: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Complications• contractile dysfunction• arrhythmias• rupture• chronic progressive heart failure

• Prognosis• depends on remaining function and perfusion• overall 1 year mortality: 30%• 3-4% mortality per year thereafter

Myocardial Infarction

Page 41: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Rupture of papillary muscle after MI

Page 42: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Blood Vessels• Heart I

• Heart Failure• Congenital Heart Disease• Ischemic Heart Disease• Hypertensive Heart Disease

Cardiac Pathology Outline

Page 43: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

• Can affect either L or R ventricle

• Cor pulmonale is RV enlargement due to pulmonary hypertension caused by primary lung disorders

• Result: myocyte hypertrophy

• Reasons for heart failure in hypertension are poorly understood

Hypertensive Heart Disease

Page 44: Cardiac Pathology 2: Heart Failure, Ischemic Heart Disease and other assorted stuff Kristine Krafts, M.D. October 8, 2013

Left ventricular hypertrophy (L) and cor pulmonale (R)