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It’s another session of CardioNerds Rounds! In these rounds, Co-Chair, Dr. Karan Desai (previous FIT at the University of Maryland Medical Center, and now faculty at Johns Hopkins) joins Dr. Ryan Tedford (Professor of Medicine and Chief of Heart Failure and Medical Directory of Cardiac Transplantation at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, SC) to discuss the nuances of managing pulmonary hypertension in the setting of left-sided heart disease. Dr. Tedford is an internationally-recognized clinical researcher, educator, clinician and mentor, with research focuses that include the hemodynamic assessment of the right ventricle and its interaction with the pulmonary circulation and left heart.
This episode is supported with unrestricted funding from Zoll LifeVest. A special thank you to Mitzy Applegate and Ivan Chevere for their production skills that help make CardioNerds Rounds such an amazing success. All CardioNerds content is planned, produced, and reviewed solely by CardioNerds. Case details are altered to protect patient health information. CardioNerds Rounds is co-chaired by Dr. Karan Desai and Dr. Natalie Stokes.
Speaker disclosures: None
Cases discussed and Show Notes • References • Production Team
CardioNerds Rounds Page
CardioNerds Episode Page
CardioNerds Academy
Cardionerds Healy Honor Roll
CardioNerds Journal Club
Subscribe to The Heartbeat Newsletter!
Check out CardioNerds SWAG!
Become a CardioNerds Patron!
Case #1 Synopsis:
A woman in her late 30s presented to the hospital with 4 weeks of worsening dyspnea. Her history includes dilated non-ischemic cardiomyopathy diagnosed in the setting of a VT arrest around 10 years prior. Over the past 10 years she has been on guideline-directed medical therapy with symptoms that had been relatively controlled (characterized as NYHA Class II), but without objective improvement in her LV dimensions or ejection fraction (LVEF 15-20% by TTE and CMR and LVIDd at 6.8 cm). Over the past few months she had been noting decreased exercise tolerance, worsening orthopnea, and episodes of symptomatic hypotension at home. When she arrived to the hospital, she presented with BP 95/70 mmHg, increased respiratory effort, congestion and an overall profile consistent with SCAI Stage C-HF shock. In the case, we go through the hemodynamics at various points during her hospitalization and discuss options for management including medical therapy and mechanical support. The patient was eventually bridged to transplant with an Impella 5.5.
Initial Hemodynamics
Right Atrium (RA) Pressure Tracing:
Right Ventricle (RV) Pressure Tracing:
Pulmonary Artery (PA) Pressure Tracing:
Pulmonary Capillary Wedge Pressure (PCWP) Tracing:
Case 1 Rounding Pearls
Case #2 Synopsis:
A woman in her late 40s presented to clinic for another opinion regarding her PH management. In regards to her history, in the 1990s she underwent a mechanical mitral valve replacement (MVR) for mixed mitral valve disease in the setting of rheumatic fever as well as a single vessel CABG (SVG to the RCA). In the early 2000s, she had developed severe and symptomatic tricuspid regurgitation (TR) and underwent redo sternotomy for TV repair (TVr). She had generally done well until the past year when she started developing dyspnea on light exertion, abdominal fullness, lower extremity edema and over the course of a year she had four hospitalizations for heart failure. Over her hospitalizations, she was also diagnosed with hemolytic anemia. Diagnostic work-up revealed pre and post-capillary PH. Dr. Tedford reviews the subsequent hemodynamic evaluation and provides insight on managing PH post valvular intervention. She was ultimately diagnosed with mitral paravalvular regurgitation treated with transcatheter PVL closure.
Initial Hemodynamics
RA Pressure Tracing
RV Pressure Tracing
PA Pressure Tracing
PCW Pressure Tracing
Left Ventricular (LV) Pressure Tracing
PCW and LV Simultaneous Pressure Tracing
Case 2 Rounding Pearls:
By CardioNerdsIt’s another session of CardioNerds Rounds! In these rounds, Co-Chair, Dr. Karan Desai (previous FIT at the University of Maryland Medical Center, and now faculty at Johns Hopkins) joins Dr. Ryan Tedford (Professor of Medicine and Chief of Heart Failure and Medical Directory of Cardiac Transplantation at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, SC) to discuss the nuances of managing pulmonary hypertension in the setting of left-sided heart disease. Dr. Tedford is an internationally-recognized clinical researcher, educator, clinician and mentor, with research focuses that include the hemodynamic assessment of the right ventricle and its interaction with the pulmonary circulation and left heart.
This episode is supported with unrestricted funding from Zoll LifeVest. A special thank you to Mitzy Applegate and Ivan Chevere for their production skills that help make CardioNerds Rounds such an amazing success. All CardioNerds content is planned, produced, and reviewed solely by CardioNerds. Case details are altered to protect patient health information. CardioNerds Rounds is co-chaired by Dr. Karan Desai and Dr. Natalie Stokes.
Speaker disclosures: None
Cases discussed and Show Notes • References • Production Team
CardioNerds Rounds Page
CardioNerds Episode Page
CardioNerds Academy
Cardionerds Healy Honor Roll
CardioNerds Journal Club
Subscribe to The Heartbeat Newsletter!
Check out CardioNerds SWAG!
Become a CardioNerds Patron!
Case #1 Synopsis:
A woman in her late 30s presented to the hospital with 4 weeks of worsening dyspnea. Her history includes dilated non-ischemic cardiomyopathy diagnosed in the setting of a VT arrest around 10 years prior. Over the past 10 years she has been on guideline-directed medical therapy with symptoms that had been relatively controlled (characterized as NYHA Class II), but without objective improvement in her LV dimensions or ejection fraction (LVEF 15-20% by TTE and CMR and LVIDd at 6.8 cm). Over the past few months she had been noting decreased exercise tolerance, worsening orthopnea, and episodes of symptomatic hypotension at home. When she arrived to the hospital, she presented with BP 95/70 mmHg, increased respiratory effort, congestion and an overall profile consistent with SCAI Stage C-HF shock. In the case, we go through the hemodynamics at various points during her hospitalization and discuss options for management including medical therapy and mechanical support. The patient was eventually bridged to transplant with an Impella 5.5.
Initial Hemodynamics
Right Atrium (RA) Pressure Tracing:
Right Ventricle (RV) Pressure Tracing:
Pulmonary Artery (PA) Pressure Tracing:
Pulmonary Capillary Wedge Pressure (PCWP) Tracing:
Case 1 Rounding Pearls
Case #2 Synopsis:
A woman in her late 40s presented to clinic for another opinion regarding her PH management. In regards to her history, in the 1990s she underwent a mechanical mitral valve replacement (MVR) for mixed mitral valve disease in the setting of rheumatic fever as well as a single vessel CABG (SVG to the RCA). In the early 2000s, she had developed severe and symptomatic tricuspid regurgitation (TR) and underwent redo sternotomy for TV repair (TVr). She had generally done well until the past year when she started developing dyspnea on light exertion, abdominal fullness, lower extremity edema and over the course of a year she had four hospitalizations for heart failure. Over her hospitalizations, she was also diagnosed with hemolytic anemia. Diagnostic work-up revealed pre and post-capillary PH. Dr. Tedford reviews the subsequent hemodynamic evaluation and provides insight on managing PH post valvular intervention. She was ultimately diagnosed with mitral paravalvular regurgitation treated with transcatheter PVL closure.
Initial Hemodynamics
RA Pressure Tracing
RV Pressure Tracing
PA Pressure Tracing
PCW Pressure Tracing
Left Ventricular (LV) Pressure Tracing
PCW and LV Simultaneous Pressure Tracing
Case 2 Rounding Pearls: