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LAP Pressure estimation in Atrial Fibrillation

  LAP Pressure estimation in Atrial Fibrillation  Left Atrial Pressure (LAP) Estimation in Atrial Fibrillation Introduction Estimating Left Atrial Pressure (LAP) in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) is challenging because of: Beat-to-beat variability Absence of organized atrial contraction Variable RR intervals Fusion of Doppler signals Despite these limitations, echocardiography remains useful for noninvasive LAP estimation. --- Challenges in AF 1. No A wave on transmitral Doppler 2. Marked respiratory and cycle length variation 3. Variable preload 4. Difficulty averaging measurements 5. Tissue Doppler variability --- General Principles Use averages of 5–10 consecutive beats Prefer beats with similar RR intervals Avoid post-ectopic beats Combine multiple parameters rather than relying on one index --- Echocardiographic Parameters for LAP Estimation 1. Mitral Inflow Doppler E Wave Velocity High E velocity suggests elevated LAP. E >1.0–1.2 m/s may indicate increased fil...

Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection

  Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection (SCAD) Introduction Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection is a non-atherosclerotic, non-traumatic separation of the coronary arterial wall leading to formation of a false lumen or intramural hematoma, resulting in impaired coronary blood flow and acute coronary syndrome (ACS). It is an important cause of myocardial infarction in young and middle-aged women without traditional cardiovascular risk factors.  --- Epidemiology Predominantly affects women (≈85–90%) Common in age 44–53 years Important cause of MI in women <50 years Pregnancy-associated SCAD is well recognized May account for up to 4% of all ACS cases overall and a much higher proportion in younger women  --- Pathophysiology Two proposed mechanisms: 1. Inside-out mechanism An intimal tear allows blood to enter the arterial wall creating a false lumen. 2. Outside-in mechanism Bleeding from vasa vasorum causes intramural hematoma without an intimal tear. The expanding he...

Measuring Pressure Half-Time for MVA

  🚨When measuring Pressure Half-Time (T½) from the mitral inflow E-wave, one common mistake can completely mislead your assessment 👇 ❌ Wrong Way: Measuring directly from the early steep deceleration slope ➡️ Gives a shorter T½ ➡️ Leads to overestimation of Mitral Valve Area (MVA) ✅ Correct Way: Use a line-drawing method through the linear mid-portion of the E-wave ➡️ More accurate representation of deceleration ➡️ Gives a true T½ 📌 Why it matters? Because: MVA = 220 / T½ 👉 Underestimated T½ = Overestimated MVA = ❗Potential misclassification of mitral stenosis 💡 Pro Tip: If the E-wave slope is bimodal or non-linear, 👉 Ignore the early part 👉 Extrapolate the mid-slope instead 🎯 Take-home: 👉 Always avoid the early steep slope in bimodal E-wave. 👉 Use the linear mid-slope extrapolation for accurate T½ measurement 💬 Have you encountered this pitfall in your echo practice? #lifestyle

Atrial flutter Key Points

  Atrial Flutter: A Comprehensive Clinical Overview Introduction Atrial Flutter is a common supraventricular tachyarrhythmia characterized by rapid, regular atrial depolarization, usually resulting from a macro–reentrant electrical circuit within the atria. It is closely related to atrial fibrillation and may coexist in the same patient. Although often less common than atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter carries significant risks including thromboembolism, stroke, tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy, and heart failure. Recognition of atrial flutter is important because it is frequently curable with catheter ablation and has distinct electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic features. --- Definition Atrial flutter is a rapid atrial rhythm, typically with atrial rates between 240–350 beats/min, caused by a reentrant circuit most commonly located in the right atrium. The ventricular response depends on AV nodal conduction and is often regular, commonly: 2:1 conduction → ventricular r...

Echocardiographic Signs of Pulmonary Hypertension (PH)

Echocardiographic Signs of Pulmonary Hypertension (PH) 1. Elevated Pulmonary Artery Systolic Pressure (PASP) Most important screening parameter. Estimated from TR Jet Velocity: PASP = 4(V_{TR})^2 + RAP TR velocity >2.8–3.4 m/s suggests PH Higher velocity → higher probability of PH --- 2. Right Ventricular (RV) Changes RV dilatation RV hypertrophy (RV free wall >5 mm) Reduced RV systolic function RV pressure overload pattern Severe PH: RV larger than LV Reduced TAPSE Reduced RV FAC --- 3. Interventricular Septal Flattening Due to RV pressure overload. D-shaped LV in PSAX Systolic flattening → pressure overload Diastolic flattening → volume overload --- 4. Right Atrial Enlargement Enlarged RA area Dilated IVC with reduced collapse Suggests elevated right-sided pressures. --- 5. Pulmonary Artery Abnormalities Dilated main pulmonary artery PA diameter >25 mm Early systolic notching on RVOT Doppler --- 6. Shortened Pulmonary Acceleration Time (PAT) RVOT PW Doppler: PAT <105 ms s...

Guidelines for TAVI vs Surgical AVR

  TAVI vs SAVR: A Complete Clinical Comparison for Aortic Stenosis --- Introduction Severe aortic stenosis (AS) is a life-threatening condition with very high mortality if untreated. Valve replacement is the only definitive therapy. Two major approaches exist: TAVI (Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) SAVR (Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement) Over the past decade, TAVI has revolutionized management, but SAVR remains crucial in selected patients. Decision-making is now individualized and guided by a Heart Team approach. --- Basic Definitions TAVI A minimally invasive catheter-based procedure in which a bioprosthetic valve is implanted via femoral (or alternative) access without open-heart surgery. SAVR A conventional open-heart surgery involving sternotomy, cardiopulmonary bypass, and surgical replacement of the aortic valve (mechanical or bioprosthetic). --- Indications (Guideline-Based) TAVI Preferred Age >80 years or life expectancy <10 years High or prohibitive surgica...

Echo evaluation of PR

  Echocardiographic Evaluation of Pulmonary Regurgitation (PR) --- 1. 2D Echocardiography (Structural Assessment) Assess pulmonary valve morphology (normal, dysplastic, post-surgical, infective) Evaluate right ventricle (RV): RV dilatation (chronic PR hallmark) RV systolic function Look for: Dilated main pulmonary artery Associated congenital lesions (e.g., repaired TOF) --- 2. Color Doppler Assessment Visualize diastolic regurgitant jet from pulmonary artery → RVOT Assess: Jet width Jet length Vena contracta width Severe PR: Broad jet filling RVOT Mild PR: Thin, short jet near valve --- 3. Continuous Wave (CW) Doppler Key parameters: Density of signal → dense = severe Deceleration slope → steep slope = severe PR Early termination of flow Pressure Half-Time (PHT) Short PHT → more severe PR Typical interpretation: PHT < 100 ms → Severe PR 100–200 ms → Moderate > 200 ms → Mild --- 4. Pulsed Wave (PW) Doppler Sample in main pulmonary artery / branch PAs Findings: Diastolic flow ...