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Carpentier classification system of mitral regurgitation

 The Carpentier classification system of mitral regurgitation is based on leaflet motion

PISA Method for Aortic Regurgitation (AR)

  PISA Method for Aortic Regurgitation (AR) Concept PISA (Proximal Isovelocity Surface Area) is based on the principle that blood accelerates toward a regurgitant orifice forming hemispheric shells of equal velocity. By measuring these, we can quantify regurgitant flow. --- Key Formula EROA = \frac{2\pi r^2 \cdot V_{alias}}{V_{max}} --- Parameters r = PISA radius (cm) V_alias = aliasing velocity (cm/s) Vmax = peak AR velocity by CW Doppler (cm/s) --- Regurgitant Volume RVol = EROA \times VTI_{AR} --- Step-by-Step Technique 1. Use apical 5-chamber or long-axis view 2. Apply color Doppler over aortic valve 3. Lower Nyquist limit (~30–40 cm/s) 4. Zoom on LVOT/aortic valve 5. Identify flow convergence (hemisphere) 6. Measure radius (r) from orifice to aliasing line 7. Record Vmax and VTI using CW Doppler 8. Apply formulas --- Severity Cutoffs (Guideline-Based) Severity EROA (cm²) Regurgitant Volume (mL) Mild <0.10 <30 Moderate 0.10–0.29 30–59 Severe ≥0.30 ≥60 --- Important Limita...

NOBLE 10-year outcomes of PCI vs CABG in left main disease

NOBLE 10-year outcomes of PCI vs CABG in left main disease Long-term evidence comparing PCI and CABG for unprotected left main coronary disease has been limited and sometimes conflicting. The 10-year results from the NOBLE trial now provide important clarity on all-cause mortality outcomes with both revascularisation strategies. #InterventionalCardiology #clinicaltrials #clinicalresearch

PISA Method for Mitral Regurgitation (MR)

PISA Method for Mitral Regurgitation (MR) Concept (Flow Convergence Principle) The PISA (Proximal Isovelocity Surface Area) method is based on the formation of hemispheric shells of equal velocity proximal to a regurgitant orifice. As blood accelerates toward the mitral valve during systole, it forms concentric hemispheres. --- Key Formula EROA = \frac{2\pi r^2 \cdot V_a}{V_{max}} Where: EROA = Effective Regurgitant Orifice Area r = Radius of PISA (cm) Va = Aliasing velocity (cm/s) Vmax = Peak MR velocity (cm/s) via CW Doppler --- Step-by-Step Technique 1. Optimize Image Use apical 4-chamber view Zoom on mitral valve Adjust color Doppler to visualize clear flow convergence 2. Set Aliasing Velocity Shift baseline downward Typical Va = 30–40 cm/s 3. Measure Radius (r) Measure from orifice to first aliasing boundary 4. Obtain MR Velocity Use CW Doppler to get Vmax 5. Calculate EROA Apply formula above --- Regurgitant Volume (RVol) RVol = EROA \times VTI_{MR} VTI_MR = Velocity Time Integra...

Management of Warfarin-Associated Bleeding

  Management of Warfarin-Associated Bleeding --- Introduction Warfarin remains a widely used oral anticoagulant for conditions such as atrial fibrillation, venous thromboembolism, and prosthetic heart valves. However, bleeding is its most significant complication, ranging from minor mucosal bleeding to life-threatening hemorrhage. Prompt recognition and appropriate reversal of anticoagulation are critical to reduce morbidity and mortality. --- Pathophysiology Warfarin inhibits vitamin K–dependent clotting factors: II, VII, IX, and X, along with proteins C and S. Excess anticoagulation (elevated INR) predisposes to bleeding due to impaired coagulation cascade function. --- Initial Assessment Key Steps: Assess severity of bleeding Check INR level Evaluate hemodynamic status Identify site of bleeding Review warfarin dose and drug interactions --- Classification of Bleeding Severity 1. Minor Bleeding Epistaxis, gum bleeding, bruising No hemodynamic compromise 2. Major Bleeding Hemoglob...

Quick AR Grading on Echocardiography

  Aortic Regurgitation (AR) Grading on Echocardiography Aortic regurgitation assessment on echocardiography is multiparametric and integrative. No single parameter should be used in isolation—severity is determined by combining qualitative, semi-quantitative, and quantitative findings along with ventricular response. --- 🔴 1. Pathophysiology Insight (Why grading matters) AR causes diastolic backflow from aorta → LV Leads to: Volume overload LV dilatation Progressive LV systolic dysfunction Acute AR behaves differently from chronic AR → always interpret in context --- 🔵 2. Core Echocardiographic Windows PLAX (Parasternal Long Axis) → jet origin, LV size PSAX (Aortic level) → cusp morphology Apical 5-chamber / 3-chamber → Doppler alignment Suprasternal / Descending aorta view → flow reversal --- 🟣 3. Qualitative Assessment Color Doppler Jet Characteristics Mild AR Small, narrow jet Limited to LVOT Moderate AR Intermediate jet size Severe AR Large jet Penetrates deep into LV cavity...

Lipoprotein(a) — Latest Guidelines (2026 Update)

  Lipoprotein(a) — Latest Guidelines (2026 Update) 1. Who Should Be Tested? (Major Change 🔑) All adults should have Lp(a) measured at least once in lifetime (ACC/AHA 2026, ESC/EAS 2025)  Earlier selective testing → now shift toward universal screening Strong indications: Premature ASCVD Family history of early CAD Recurrent events despite optimal LDL Calcific aortic stenosis 👉 Lp(a) is genetically determined & stable, so one-time test is usually enough  --- 2. Risk Thresholds (Important Exam Point) Lp(a) Level Interpretation <30 mg/dL Normal 30–49 mg/dL Intermediate ≥50 mg/dL (≥125 nmol/L) High / Risk-enhancing ≥250 nmol/L Very high risk (~2× ASCVD risk) ≥50 mg/dL is now universally accepted cutoff across guidelines  Higher levels → progressively higher risk (no strict threshold effect)  --- 3. Role in Risk Stratification Lp(a) is now considered: ✅ Independent causal risk factor for: Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) Stroke Calcific aortic ...