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Heart Failure

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    The topic of our conference this afternoon
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    is is a very important one
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    namely, heart
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    failure
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    and its important, as you'll hear
    from my colleagues,
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    for a number of reasons. The sheer
    prevalence of heart failure in our population
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    says that
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    you're going to deal with a tremendous numbers of patients having
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    related problems.
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    The associated
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    morbidity and mortality is very significant and
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    heart failure, one way or another,
    consumes a very, very significant
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    fraction of our health care resources.
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    So it's a problem that you're going to
    be dealing with
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    a lot of the time.
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    I will spend my time
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    just introducing the
    general concept which we've had a little
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    bit in lecture, but will try to embellish
    that
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    and illustrate some of the
    pathologic anatomy associated with heart
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    failure one way or another.
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    Then I'll pass the baton to Dr Matthews
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    who will make clinical reality out of
    this
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    and translate all of this into signs and
    symptom that the patients manifest
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    and
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    appropriate strategies
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    of medical therapy and then we
    will conclude the afternoon with
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    Dr Jonathan Haft
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    and with the participation of a
    patient of his
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    and discuss the treatment of
    advanced heart failure
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    with mechanical support and
    cardiac transplantation.
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    So that's
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    the agenda for this afternoon.
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    Now in its
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    very simple definition, and there are a
    lot of ways to define it, the very simple
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    definition of heart failure
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    involves the inability of the heart
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    to meet
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    to really pump sufficient
    blood to meet the metabolic needs of
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    the body.
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    Now this can happen in a in a variety of
    ways.
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    It can come to pass, and this isn't as frequent, that the
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    heart is putting out a normal or even an excessive amount of blood.
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    It's really pumping it out there, but it's being
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    driven by
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    an increased demand in the peripheral
    tissues that it just can't keep up with.
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    This sort of thing we see in thyrotoxicosis.
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    It used to be seen,
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    we don't see it much any more thankfully, in beriberi - vitamin deficiency
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    with vasodilatation
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    all over the place and
    the heart just couldn't keep up with
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    that volume
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    of the
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    cardiovascular system.
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    It's seen occasionally with
    arteriovenous fistulas
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    that dump a lot of blood
    directly from arteries into the veins in the heart
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    The heart just can't keep up. Or severe anemia.
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    Those sorts of things will result in what we call a high output sort of failure,
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    but much more
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    often, we're dealing with
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    the problem of
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    not enough blood being ejected
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    for one reason or another
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    from the heart to support even normal
    demands
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    and this is a combination really of
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    the loss of systolic umph,
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    in other words, the contracting
    heart just can't get it out there
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    in the way it should and
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    often this can be accompanied by
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    diastolic,
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    i've listed it here as diastolic failure but
    it's a difficulty in diastolic filling
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    which can impair the heart action. If
    the heart muscle can't relax and is ineffective
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    it's stiff
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    it won't
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    accept
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    the right volume coming into it and
    that's going to lead
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    also to failure.
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    One way or another, these factors can lead to a constellation
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    of signs and symptoms,
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    we'll get to that at the end.
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    It's really related on the one hand to
    congestion of organs which you know all
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    about now after
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    lectures in pathology and
    hypoprofusion of tissues which
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    your
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    we haven't emphasized as much, but it's a
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    very important point.
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    Now, when we look at the causes of heart failure
    and there are many, many of them, far more
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    than we can talk about,
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    but
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    if we look at those
    situations where there is
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    some unusual demand
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    on the heart, and the heart just can't meet it, they
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    fall into a number
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    of categories, and I will
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    illustrate each of these in a
    moment,
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    but one very important
    category is resistance
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    to flow, in other words,
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    if something is keeping the flow of blood from going so
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    the heart has to work harder to push it
    past that resistance
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    it will come to the point where the
    heart could no longer do it and it fails.
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    Another problem is what we call regurgitant
    flow, I mean you like to think of the
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    blood flowing in one direction through
    the cardiovascular system, but
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    sometimes it comes to pass where, at a point,
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    there's
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    regurgitation, instead of things pulsing forward, they slosh
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    backward, and that
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    imposes a strain on the heart
    as you will see
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    and thirdly and very importantly there is
    disease of various sorts, lots of sorts,
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    targeting the myocardium itself
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    so that there's no resistance to flow,
    there's no regurgitant flow
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    perhaps, but the
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    heart muscle is sick.
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    And finally, we won't talk
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    at all about this, I won't, about conduction abnormalities
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    which can also lead to decompensation
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    of the heart.
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    Now, I'd like
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    to illustrate some of these
    very quickly, don't get lost in the details,
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    just
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    let it flow over you, you're going
    to get these details later on
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    in the year
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    later on in your careers, but just
    for a little orientation,
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    I'll give you an example first of resistance to flow,
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    there is a good hallmark for
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    it, I can't show you
    hypertension obviously
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    but think of
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    the situation when a patient
    has established significant hypertension,
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    it means that 24/7
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    every minute, every beat of the
    heart
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    that poor left ventricle is having to
    force against an increased resistance to flow,
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    that's what hypertension
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    is all about. The result
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    one of the results you see here is
    is this rather massive
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    myocardial hypertrophy which i'm sure
    you all recognize,
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    so that's one
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    kind of resistance to flow. Here's another one, this takes a
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    little explaining, it's an unusual plane of section of the heart,
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    but what attracts your
    attention right away is that the left ventricle
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    is immensely hypertrophied, very thick
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    and very heavy, and the reason
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    for it is not terribly
    well shown here
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    but here is the aortic outflow, this is the aorta here, and this would be the aortic valve
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    which you can't get a good view
    of, but
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    a common lesion is stenosis of the aortic valve,
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    and obviously, in that situation, it's very
    analogous to hypertension, every time
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    the ventricle contracts, it's got to push that blood
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    through a stenotic valve
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    and it's a lot of work.
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    I'll show you one of these valves from
    above, this is an interesting one,
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    this is a pretty typical example of
    aortic stenosis,
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    you're standing in the ascending
    aorta, looking back
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    towards the left ventricle, and
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    you're aware from your gross anatomy
    that this should be a three cusp valve
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    and you're seeing a couple of things here,
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    first of all this is only two cusps
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    and that was a congenital problem
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    and it's a fairly frequent one
    in our population, there are probably a
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    couple of so-called
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    bicuspid valves in this room
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    and
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    whatever the case
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    the aortic valve is very susceptible to calcification
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    and stiffening with age, and if you
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    plot it against the aging
    population, we see an increasing
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    incidence of stenotic
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    aortic valves even if they're not
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    bicuspid, if they're congenitally bicuspid like this they get wrecked
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    very frequently
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    earlier on so that
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    instead of maybe in the
    seventies or eighties, it might be in the
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    fifties and sixties that the patient
    would suffer from such stenosis.
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    But you can see
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    that every time
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    the ventricle is trying to push
    blood through that orifice, and it's really like brick
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    it doesn't move.
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    It's going to be a
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    tremendous load on
    the left ventricle.
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    here's another valve stenosis for you,
    we don't see this as much anymore,
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    it's a result usually of old rheumatic fever
    in childhood, but the mitral valve
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    here is reduced to
    a fish mouth, it's all puckered up
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    and scarred, and frequently calcified,
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    and the valve leaflets
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    can't move at all,
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    so that the blood coming out of the lungs into the
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    into the left atrium trying to get through
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    into the left ventricle, you're looking down towards the left ventricle,
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    it's got to pass by that stenotic slit.
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    The result is damming back,
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    very obviously you know about passive
    congestion, you can see this immensely dilated
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    left atrium
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    and you can imagine
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    what was happening in the
    lungs
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    behind that sort of obstruction.
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    Now as far as
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    regurgitant flow, hold on with me
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    and i'll try to explain
    it, here is another mitral valve, we've chopped off the
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    the atrium and you're
    looking right at the
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    mitral valve, and
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    think about what you saw in gross anatomy, the
    mitral valve leaflets usually come together
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    like that and keep the blood, during systole,
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    keep the blood from
    flowing back into the atrium so all the blood goes out
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    the aorta like it should.
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    Here,
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    and this happens for a variety of
    reasons, but here this leaflet of the valve
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    is sort of pooched up and
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    and with every ventricular systole, blood is able to force its way back
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    into the atrium, which means
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    the poor old left ventricle is
    pumping some of that blood more than once
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    in other words it's putting part of it out
    the aorta, part of it back up the atrium,
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    and that comes
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    sloshing down for the next
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    beat of the heart
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    and it consists,
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    it induces a volume overload on the valve
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    and
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    on the ventricle
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    and it may fail.
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    Now when you get to the realm of myocardial
    abnormality per se, in other words disease of the myocardium
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    there are lots
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    and lots of examples, and the most frequent one and most important one is myocardial ischemic disease
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    in other words, the result of coronary artery disease, atherosclerosis
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    and its complications, and what happens when the myocardium
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    becomes ischemic.
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    Clearly many patients who have a
    myocardial infarct, an acute heart attack
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    will go into
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    acute failure if enough of
    the myocardium is involved right then and there in the
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    emergency room.
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    But chronically it can become a big problem
    even when the
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    situation heals. Here, for example,
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    a slice of a heart, this is left ventricle over here,
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    and this individual sustained a
    myocardial infarct, I don't know how long ago,
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    it could be years ago,
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    months ago, and you see a lot of scar
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    throughout the ventricular wall, a little
    bit back there, a little bit in the septum,
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    but a tremendous scar here
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    and when this involves enough of the
    ventricular myocardium, it puts a strain
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    on what's left of viable myocardium, because this
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    obviously doesn't contract.
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    Patients can sustain a lot of myocardial infarcts,
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    here's serial sections of the same heart,
    and you can see at least a couple of infarcts
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    that involve
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    a tremendous
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    fraction of the
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    left ventricle
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    and again when
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    that happens, the rest of
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    this can't keep up with it, and the left
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    ventricle fails.
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    Here is a heart that was
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    was removed from a patient
    who was still alive
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    happy and well as far as i know
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    This is an explant to the heart, in
    other words, taken out of the time of transplantation
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    and this was also
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    ischemic disease, and this
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    individual had scraped through
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    with this much of the heart converted into
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    what amounted to a fibrous sack, totally
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    non-contractile
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    and you can see there's even a clot in there because it wasn't moving
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    and that had
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    produced failure of the remaining myocardium.
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    So that's a
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    good sample of
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    ischemic
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    disease leading to chronic failure of the left ventricle.
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    Now, beyond
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    ischemic disease there are a whole lot of them,
    don't worry about the details
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    I'll show you this as an example
    of an inflammatory process targeted at
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    the myocardium. We see this
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    with certain viral infections, certain protozoan infections,
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    with bacterial
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    infections, but you can
    get inflammation of the myocardium
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    and you can almost literally hear
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    these cells chewing at the myocytes
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    and obviously
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    obviously that can produce failure.
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    We see that not infrequently,
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    then the heart can be involved in a
    variety of systemic diseases, in other words
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    you can have something
    going on affecting many tissues in
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    the body, but that something may affect the heart and produce
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    failure. Here's an example
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    now I don't know
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    if I want to dart in the
    auditorium completely to show you this
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    did you discuss hemochromatosis in genetics? Yes? Not a complete blank.
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    It's an ineffective storage
    disease because the body absorbs too much iron
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    from the gut,
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    and the iron
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    gets stored in a variety of
    issues and one of the tissues it gets stored in
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    is the heart,
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    and you recognize instantly that this is myocardium
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    and as you stare at it a little bit, you'll pick out some nice golden brown pigment
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    there and there and there, you see a little
    more over there, and little bit down there and over there.
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    and one of the pigments
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    you'd think of in the heart, someone asked me a question about this last week,
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    it would be lipofuscin (wear and tear pigment)
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    but another pigment you got to think about is iron, and this is stored iron
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    in this myocardium. Here is
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    that blue
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    Prussian blue iron stain, tremendous iron
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    load, iron is bad for you
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    if it gets deposited in certain tissues. This can produce myocardial failure.
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    This was from a relatively young man who presented with
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    very advanced heart failure
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    because of his unrecognized
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    hemochromatosis.
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    One other that you will hear about
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    probably next year
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    is amyloidosis. Amyloid
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    is an abnormal protein that could
    get deposited in a number of tissues
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    for a number of reasons, which I won't go into.
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    But all of this
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    sort of translucent, gray stuff surrounding the
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    myocytes, you're looking at a cross-sectional view of myocardium,
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    and you can see that each myocyte is enveloped in this
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    casing
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    of amyloid.
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    And this is
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    a marvelous example of
    something that renders the heart rigid
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    and unable to
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    expand diastolically, and it can be
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    a cause of heart failure.
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    Finally,
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    this is not a complete list, I'm just showing
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    the examples, there are
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    a number of genetic diseases
    of the heart muscle itself, where from
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    the get go, because of
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    abnormal genetic endowment
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    the heart is
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    made wrong. Here's an example
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    of something we call hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
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    Cardiomyopathy means
    heart muscle disease.
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    This particular heart was immensely
    hypertrophic, you can see that left ventricle
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    it's really tremendous with no
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    valve disease, no hypertension to explain that,
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    but look at the
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    goofy muscle, you know
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    what myocardium is supposed to look like, and the histology people never show you
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    the kind of
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    disarray and criss-crossing of
    fibers like that.
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    This is the result of the genetic
    abnormality of this myocardium.
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    All right, these are just a few examples
    of the things that can go wrong
  • 16:37 - 16:40
  • 16:40 - 16:41
    and most frequently,
  • 16:41 - 16:46
    if I had to pick from this whole list, I'd say hypertension and
  • 16:46 - 16:47
    ischemic disease
  • 16:47 - 16:52
    are the big actors at least in our population.
  • 16:52 - 16:55
    Whatever the cause, as the heart is
  • 16:55 - 16:56
    overburdened,
  • 16:56 - 17:00
    there are certain compensatory
    mechanisms that kick in
  • 17:00 - 17:02
    for a while, in other words, enable
    the heart to keep up
  • 17:02 - 17:05
    with the abnormal strain,
  • 17:05 - 17:08
    and some of these you know about, you've
    heard about I'm sure about the Frank Starling
  • 17:08 - 17:10
    mechanism,
  • 17:10 - 17:11
  • 17:11 - 17:11
  • 17:11 - 17:17
    where the myocyte is stretched by
    increased filling pressure, it's stretched
  • 17:17 - 17:19
    and contracts then
  • 17:19 - 17:20
    with greater vigor,
  • 17:20 - 17:23
    in other words, it can put out more UMPH
  • 17:23 - 17:27
    if it starts from a slight stretch. The
    trouble with that mechanism is that it fails.
  • 17:27 - 17:28
    In other words, for a while
  • 17:28 - 17:31
    it's adaptive, you get more and more UMPH for each
  • 17:31 - 17:34
    contraction and then it peters out
  • 17:34 - 17:37
    for a variety of reasons.
  • 17:37 - 17:40
    A second compensation is hypertrophy,
  • 17:40 - 17:44
    and you know about this, we talked about
    it last summer I guess.
  • 17:44 - 17:46
    It's a situation where the same number
  • 17:46 - 17:49
    of muscle cells are there
  • 17:49 - 17:51
    but more sarcomeres are added
  • 17:51 - 17:54
    and the muscle cells enlarge the whole
  • 17:54 - 17:56
    tissue grossly
  • 17:56 - 17:59
    enlarges and there's more UMPH.
  • 17:59 - 18:00
    I mean it's very definitely
  • 18:00 - 18:03
    a compensatory mechanism.
  • 18:03 - 18:05
    A third compensation
  • 18:05 - 18:08
    mechanism I've listed
  • 18:08 - 18:11
    is activation of neuro-humoral systems and we're not going to go into that
  • 18:11 - 18:14
    in much detail, just enough detail
  • 18:14 - 18:15
    so you know that
  • 18:15 - 18:17
    they are there.
  • 18:17 - 18:19
    Now here's hypertrophy!
  • 18:19 - 18:22
    Normal size myocytes you see over here
  • 18:22 - 18:25
    and each one is on the average just a
    little bit thicker
  • 18:25 - 18:27
    than the normal
  • 18:27 - 18:28
  • 18:28 - 18:32
    That's because of addition of sarcomeres, not much change in the number of cells
  • 18:32 - 18:36
    and you can imagine these cells having
    more UMPH like a weight lifter,
  • 18:36 - 18:41
    imagine that, like a weight lifters arm
  • 18:41 - 18:44
    This is maybe what we see
  • 18:44 - 18:49
    grossly, there's an increase in
    the muscle, increase in the weight of the heart,
  • 18:49 - 18:49
    and sometimes
  • 18:49 - 18:53
    we see concentric hypertrophy, meaning
  • 18:53 - 18:58
    the chamber is not enlarged, it may even be a
    little smaller, gross thickening of the walls
  • 18:58 - 18:59
    and its
  • 18:59 - 19:00
    concentric.
  • 19:00 - 19:03
    We see that usually with
    pressure overload.
  • 19:03 - 19:06
    With a volume overload, we may see
  • 19:06 - 19:07
    what looks like no hypertrophy
  • 19:07 - 19:10
    at all except that's a lot more muscle
  • 19:10 - 19:13
    than there is normal, it's just that it's
    dilated.
  • 19:13 - 19:16
    That also happens in very advanced
    failure
  • 19:16 - 19:19
    from any cause, you see this sort of
    eccentric picture.
  • 19:19 - 19:20
  • 19:20 - 19:24
    When it comes to the neuro-humoral
    mechanisms, I'm just going to race through these now,
  • 19:24 - 19:25
    there is
  • 19:25 - 19:28
    first of all
  • 19:28 - 19:30
  • 19:30 - 19:32
    all of these things tend to be triggered
    by pressure and
  • 19:32 - 19:36
    stretch receptors that are
    scattered through the heart
  • 19:36 - 19:39
    the aorta, the carotids,
  • 19:39 - 19:41
    and the kidney even there is such sensing.
  • 19:41 - 19:45
    When the cardiac output
    begins to drop, these receptors say UH OH
  • 19:45 - 19:50
    and they trigger a number of things, one of the things they trigger is
  • 19:50 - 19:51
    a central nervous system,
  • 19:51 - 19:54
    i'm sorry, the sympathetic nervous
    system
  • 19:54 - 19:58
    with release of norepinephrine
  • 19:58 - 19:59
    and this can produce
  • 19:59 - 20:02
    a contractile boost for the heart
  • 20:02 - 20:04
  • 20:04 - 20:07
    this can produce an increased heart
    rate
  • 20:07 - 20:11
    these things will help meet
    an abnormal load
  • 20:11 - 20:16
    and also this will produce vasoconstriction peripherally.
  • 20:16 - 20:18
    This is designed,
  • 20:18 - 20:20
    this evolved this way presumably to
  • 20:20 - 20:26
    to make sure that
    blood gets shunted to essential organs
  • 20:26 - 20:29
    so there's peripheral
    vasoconstriction
  • 20:29 - 20:34
    which increase, well we'll talk about
    what the bad things it does.
  • 20:34 - 20:35
    Vasopressin is released
  • 20:35 - 20:38
    from the hypothalamus, that's also a vasoconstrictor,
  • 20:38 - 20:41
    and we talked in class previously about
  • 20:41 - 20:44
    the renin-angiotension-aldosterone system.
  • 20:44 - 20:45
  • 20:45 - 20:52
    The kidney senses the decreased flow
    that's coming to it, secretes renin which
  • 20:52 - 20:56
    acts on angiotensinogen which is
    circulating protein
  • 20:56 - 20:56
  • 20:56 - 20:58
    forms angiotensin I
  • 20:58 - 21:02
    and then there's angiotensin
    converting enzyme which takes angiotensin II
  • 21:02 - 21:03
    that in turn
  • 21:03 - 21:05
    stimulates the production
  • 21:05 - 21:10
    in the adrenals of aldosterone.
  • 21:10 - 21:11
  • 21:11 - 21:15
    The importance of all of this is first of all angiotensin II
  • 21:15 - 21:18
    is also a vasoconstrictor
  • 21:18 - 21:20
    and
  • 21:20 - 21:24
    between angiotensin II and aldosterone, there is
  • 21:24 - 21:29
    sodium retention, salt
    retention, sodium retention and water retention
  • 21:29 - 21:30
    and that has
  • 21:30 - 21:33
    some important consequences.
  • 21:33 - 21:38
    I just listed, I don't have time to go into it, the natriuretic peptides
  • 21:38 - 21:42
    secreted by the heart which
    tend to counteract the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
  • 21:42 - 21:45
    system to some extent.
  • 21:45 - 21:49
    Unfortunately, all of these
  • 21:49 - 21:52
    mechanisms
  • 21:52 - 21:56
    are limited in how much help they can provide and there's a downside
  • 21:56 - 21:57
    to a lot of them.
  • 21:57 - 21:58
    Now
  • 21:58 - 22:02
    problems with hypertrophy, it just gets bigger and
  • 22:02 - 22:04
    bigger and bigger muscle,
  • 22:04 - 22:08
    it doesn't work out that way because
    the capillary network in the muscle
  • 22:08 - 22:11
    does not increase in parallel and you
  • 22:11 - 22:15
    end up with perfusion problems
    so there's a limit to how much hypertrophy
  • 22:15 - 22:18
    the tissue can stand.
  • 22:18 - 22:21
    Same is true for the ratio between mitochondria and
  • 22:21 - 22:27
    and contractile protein, so to speak,
    the mitochondria-to-meat ratio
  • 22:27 - 22:31
    does not keep up to what it should be so
    the energy is a problem.
  • 22:31 - 22:33
    Then very importantly
  • 22:33 - 22:38
    we're learning that there is altered
    gene expression
  • 22:38 - 22:40
    and alteration in the
  • 22:40 - 22:43
    proteins that are produced, and these may involve
  • 22:43 - 22:46
    contractile proteins,
  • 22:46 - 22:46
    segmentation
  • 22:46 - 22:50
    contraction coupling them, they may involve energy utilization,
  • 22:50 - 22:53
    but some abnormal proteins are made
  • 22:53 - 22:57
    there's an increase in apoptosis
  • 22:57 - 23:00
    in a hypertrophic myocardium
  • 23:00 - 23:02
    and, under the influence
  • 23:02 - 23:07
    of all of this is actually driven by the various hormonal
  • 23:07 - 23:09
    things that i've mentioned
  • 23:09 - 23:11
    and with something
  • 23:11 - 23:15
    we call remodeling occurs, there's a
    change in geometry of the ventricle
  • 23:15 - 23:19
    which can have implications of tugs on the chordae tendinae of the mitral valve
  • 23:19 - 23:23
    the wrong valve, you can get mitral regurgitation,
  • 23:23 - 23:26
    it's a disadvantageous thing
  • 23:26 - 23:30
    often associated with a lot of fibrosis, that blue-green tissue racing through the myocardium
  • 23:30 - 23:31
  • 23:31 - 23:35
    is a fibrosis in the remodeled ventricle
  • 23:35 - 23:39
    which causes problems of its own as you
    can imagine, I don't have to go into any detail
  • 23:39 - 23:40
  • 23:40 - 23:42
    So that's a problem
  • 23:42 - 23:44
    and there's a problem
  • 23:44 - 23:48
    with neurohumoral activation,
  • 23:48 - 23:50
    vasoconstriction increases the
  • 23:50 - 23:54
    afterload that this poor
    old failing heart has to pump against.
  • 23:54 - 23:56
    It sounds like
  • 23:56 - 23:59
    a nice mechanism, but it
  • 23:59 - 24:00
    bites the heart
  • 24:00 - 24:04
    Various of these humoral
    substances are
  • 24:04 - 24:06
    cardiotoxic
  • 24:06 - 24:07
    chronically
  • 24:07 - 24:09
    in other words, they are
    responsible for the increase in apoptosis
  • 24:09 - 24:14
    they drive the remodeling and it's a bad thing for the heart
  • 24:14 - 24:16
    in the long run,
  • 24:16 - 24:17
    and we know about the
  • 24:17 - 24:22
    implications of sodium and
    water retention and how that
  • 24:22 - 24:24
    overloads the heart.
  • 24:24 - 24:26
    All of these things
  • 24:26 - 24:26
    contribute to the downward spiral
  • 24:26 - 24:29
  • 24:29 - 24:33
    and I've simplified a very
    complex business, but
  • 24:33 - 24:35
    there are many
  • 24:35 - 24:38
    consequences for the
    peripheral tissues and that's what we're
  • 24:38 - 24:42
    really talking about when we talk about
    heart failure, what's going on
  • 24:42 - 24:44
    in the peripheral tissues.
  • 24:44 - 24:48
    These consequences we can
    talk about in a number of ways, we talk
  • 24:48 - 24:51
    about sometimes forward failure and backward failure.
  • 24:51 - 24:54
    Forward failure being the idea that
  • 24:54 - 24:58
    the failing heart does not perfuse the
    tissues well enough, and
  • 24:58 - 25:00
    backward failure you're familiar
  • 25:00 - 25:03
    with the idea of passive
    congestion and we talked about that in class
  • 25:03 - 25:05
    so you have a good image of that.
  • 25:05 - 25:09
    We speak of left heart failure and
    right heart failure,
  • 25:09 - 25:10
    most processes that cause
  • 25:10 - 25:12
    heart failure start out on the left
  • 25:12 - 25:15
    but it's a closed plumbing system
  • 25:15 - 25:20
    so as the left heart fails, the right heart is going to fail.
  • 25:20 - 25:21
    The commonest
  • 25:21 - 25:25
    cause of right heart failure then is left heart failure.
  • 25:25 - 25:29
    There are some of the examples where the
    right heart fails primarily and it has to do
  • 25:29 - 25:31
    with things happening in the lungs,
  • 25:31 - 25:37
    they're relatively less common and you'll
    hear more about them some other time,
  • 25:37 - 25:41
    but the backward consequences
    of left and right heart failure are very
  • 25:41 - 25:45
    familiar to you already, we know that when the left heart fails you get
  • 25:45 - 25:48
    pulmonary congestion and edema,
  • 25:48 - 25:50
    when the right heart fails, you get
  • 25:50 - 25:52
    elevation of hydrostatic
  • 25:52 - 25:55
    pressure in a variety of
    tissues
  • 25:55 - 25:56
    with associated
  • 25:56 - 26:00
    congestive changes in
    organs and accumulation of edema
  • 26:00 - 26:02
    fluid and this
  • 26:02 - 26:05
    is when we start to speak of congestive heart failure.
  • 26:05 - 26:08
    We're throwing that adjective very frequently
  • 26:08 - 26:10
  • 26:10 - 26:14
    What we're not emphasizing, and I'll just conclude by mentioning this,
  • 26:14 - 26:15
    are the forward changes
  • 26:15 - 26:18
    associated with left heart
    failure, in other words, when the left
  • 26:18 - 26:20
    heart fails, things begin to
  • 26:20 - 26:26
    happen because tissues
    in a variety of places simply aren't being perfused.
  • 26:26 - 26:27
    And you're familiar already with
  • 26:27 - 26:30
    the activation of the
  • 26:30 - 26:32
    renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
  • 26:32 - 26:37
    from forward failure to
  • 26:37 - 26:39
    supply enough blood to the kidney,
  • 26:39 - 26:45
    I would point out that as the
    perfusion drops more and more,
  • 26:45 - 26:49
    the kidney can really shut down as far as
    its excretory function and nitrogenous
  • 26:49 - 26:52
    waste can pile up.
  • 26:52 - 26:54
    Sometimes they speak,
  • 26:54 - 26:58
    people speak, of a cardio-renal syndrome because of this.
  • 26:58 - 26:59
    Well many other
  • 26:59 - 27:04
    tissues suffer from this lack of perfusion in the same way.
  • 27:04 - 27:07
    We've shown you for instance the liver,
  • 27:07 - 27:11
    and the liver gets caught in a one-two punch,
  • 27:11 - 27:13
    there's resistance to outflow from the liver
  • 27:13 - 27:16
    the fact is that the poor old failing left
    ventricle isn't delivering enough blood
  • 27:16 - 27:17
    to this, the central
  • 27:17 - 27:19
    lobular area,
  • 27:19 - 27:22
    and it undergoes a sort of hemorrhagic
  • 27:22 - 27:24
    necrosis which you remember that, you never forget
  • 27:24 - 27:26
    that kind of a picture.
  • 27:26 - 27:31
    Now something, a little wrinkle that I'll point out here,
  • 27:31 - 27:31
    is that the aldosterone
  • 27:31 - 27:35
    levels in patients in
    failure are way way up there
  • 27:35 - 27:36
    and part of it
  • 27:36 - 27:40
    obviously is because it's been
    triggered by the production of angiotensin II
  • 27:40 - 27:42
    and so forth, but the liver
  • 27:42 - 27:44
    when it's in that kind of a state,
  • 27:44 - 27:48
    does not catabolize aldosterone the way it should,
  • 27:48 - 27:53
    and the patient may end up with a twenty fold increase in aldosterone level partly because
  • 27:53 - 27:55
    of synthesis and partly because of
  • 27:55 - 27:57
    "non tearing down"
  • 27:57 - 27:58
  • 27:58 - 27:59
    by the liver
  • 27:59 - 28:01
  • 28:01 - 28:02
    One more example, the gut
  • 28:02 - 28:04
    may suffer in very advanced cardiac
  • 28:04 - 28:07
    failure, patches of mucosa
  • 28:07 - 28:09
    in the bowel may undergo
  • 28:09 - 28:13
    necrosis because they're furthest from the blood supply
  • 28:13 - 28:17
    and we speak of ischemic colitis, a bit
    of a misnomer as it is an inflammatory condition,
  • 28:17 - 28:17
  • 28:17 - 28:18
    but actually that sort of thing
  • 28:18 - 28:21
    can be a problem.
  • 28:21 - 28:25
    Other organs and in fact even the
    central nervous system in very advanced failure
  • 28:25 - 28:26
    we see problems
  • 28:26 - 28:29
    with CNS function.
  • 28:29 - 28:32
    Well I turn the baton over
  • 28:32 - 28:34
    to Dr. Matthews
  • 28:34 - 28:38
    you just keep some of
    these images in mind and she will flesh them out,
  • 28:38 - 28:38
  • 28:38 - 28:40
    as they say, with the clinical realities
  • 28:40 - 28:43
    and with some of the
  • 28:43 - 28:44
    therapeutic strategies
  • 28:44 -
    that make sense I hope.
Title:
Heart Failure
Description:

A lecture on Heart Failure by Dr. Gerald Abrams, M.D. This lecture was taught as a part of the University of Michigan Medical School's M1 - Cardiovascular and Respiratory Sequence.

View the course materials:
http://open.umich.edu/education/med/m1/cardioresp/fall2008/materials

Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

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Duration:
28:48
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