A man presents with pleuritic central chest pain and dyspnoea following a viral illness. His pain is worse when lying down is a stereotypical history of:
Acute pericarditis
Features
a 40-year-old female presents with dyspnoea and fatigue. On examination a mid-diastolic murmur is heard. An echocardiogram shows a pedunculated mass in the left atrium
Atrial myxoma
- non-cancerous tumour growing on upper side of heart, commonly on atrial septum
Betablockers side effects
With respect to infective endocarditis, which one of the following organisms is most associated with patients with no past medical history?
Staph aureus
- patients with no pmh
Strep viridians
- patients with poor dental hygiene
staph epidermis
- first 2 months following prosthetic valve surgery
Sound characteristic of mitral regurgitation
split s2
ACE Inhibitors
Inhibits the conversion angiotensin I to angiotensin II
a 50-year-old woman with a history of rheumatic fever presents with dyspnoea. On examination she is found to be in atrial fibrillation, with a loud S1, split S2 and a diastolic murmur
she most probably has?
- main cause is rheumatic fever
a 70-year-old woman is found to have a pan-systolic murmur after presenting with dyspnoea. A soft S1 and split S2 is also noted
mitral regurgitation
Ischaemic changes in leads I, aVL +/- V5-6 would be most likely caused by a lesion of the:
left circumflex
ischaemic changes in leads V1-V4
left anterior descending
quick comparison of aortic stenosis and mitral stenosis sounds?
aortic stenosis - soft s2, narrow pulse pressure, slow rising pulse
mitral stenosis - opening snap, low volume pulse
mitral regurgitation sound
soft s1
an ECG shows a constant PR interval but the P wave is often not followed by a QRS complex
second degree heart block
a man develops a cardiac arrest shortly after being admitted with a myocardial infarction. The ECG monitor shows rapid, irregular waveforms
ventricular fibrillation
progressive prolongation of the PR interval until a dropped beat occurs
type 1 second degree heart block
PR interval constant by P wave not followed by QRS complex
TYPE 2 SECOND DEGREE HEART BLOCK
Third degree heart block
no association between P waves and QRS complexes
ECG changes in II, III, aVF would be most likely caused by a lesion of the:
right coronary artery
what molecule responsible for carrying cholesterol into intima
LDL
ischaemic changes in leads V4-6, I, aVL
left anterior descending or left circumflex
patent ductus arteriosus sound
reversed split s2
mitral regurgitation sound
Mid-late diastolic murmur, ‘rumbling’ in character
mitral stenosis
Austin-Flint murmur (severe aortic regurgitation)
Holosystolic murmur, high-pitched and ‘blowing’ in character
2. tricuspid regurgitation