Left atrial pressure, LAP, is becoming rapidly and important measurement to accurately treat patients in acute decompensated heart failure with congestion but also to rule out a component of pulmonary vascular congestion due to HfpEF. Due to the dramatic decrease decline in use of pulmonary artery catheters, this is really the next best measurement we have for left ventricular filling/correlate to left ventricular end-diastolic pressure.
However in patients with moderate to severe ARDS that require proning due to severe hypoxemia, I still feel these patient's benefit from a pulmonary artery catheter. Prior studies that reviewed the use of PA catheters was in all-comers in the MICU, in a very inhomogeneous patient population, an Achilles heel in randomized control trials that limit any credibility regarding external validity.
Notable exception here is that a pulmonary artery catheter still remains a standard of care in post cardiac surgery patients, as well as stage IV class D for treatment decisions for in particular inotropic therapy with milrinone, heart failure patient and cardiogenic shock
I have posted earlier this year on diastolic function and a quick easy approach to assess intracardiac filling pressures. This is a more complete article with the 2016 guidelines from ASE with attached PowerPoint presentation.
Realize that most echocardiographic reports are quite inaccurate in determining the degree of diastolic dysfunction and are even more inaccurate in the determination of left atrial pressure. Tissue Doppler imaging from the lateral mitral annulus and medial mitral annulus has become a surrogate quick measure ( E/e' ratio) for cardiologist and Intensivist ( by bedside US) to determine left atrial pressure. Nothing is farther from the truth : these numbers need to be correlated with additional markers and pressure measurements obtained by echocardiography to give an accurate value. This requires a comprehensive and somewhat time consuming procedure, particularly if done at the bedside. In most patients on mechanical ventilation, it may not be possible to follow the guidelines to obtain all the measurements that go into the final determination of left atrial pressure/LAP
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Friday, August 23, 2019
Wednesday, August 21, 2019
LBBB and Sgarbossa Criteria in acute MI
What is the diagnosis? What criteria are used to further analyze this EKG ?
Dr Rael Sundy from Tel-Aviv had the immediate answer: this tracing represent an acute anterior wall MI .
Ideally, diagnostic tests for life-threatening conditions (i.e. AMI) need to be highly sensitive. The reason the original Sgarbossa criteria are limited in clinical practice is the low sensitivity (20%). This is why a new LBBB alone is no longer a criteria for emergent cath lab activation. Recently, Steven Smith, MD from Dr. Smith’s ECG Blog published a new criterion to replace the third component of the original Sgarbossa Criteria using the ST/S ratio instead of discordant ST-elevation ≥ 5mm.
Dr Rael Sundy from Tel-Aviv had the immediate answer: this tracing represent an acute anterior wall MI .
What are the new modified Sgarbossa Criteria?
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Scandinavian Clinical practice guidelines for therapeutic hypothermia and post-resuscitation care after cardiac arrest
A little bit of an older article on TTM, but nevertheless a nice overview
The Art of Medicine
My prior TED Talk Blog entry reminded me of a patient I saw in my clinic, many years ago as a Cardiologist when I was still practicing in a Multi-Specialty Group as well as another "beautiful" TED Talk by Dr Abraham Verhgese ( I published on another Blog I ran during those years) .....
" I recently saw a young woman referred to me for shortness of breath. She had been seen by several physicians and had a recent ER visit for this problem. A week prior she reported some atypical chest pain and a CT scan of the chest was done. She was diagnosed with a "small pneumonia" and given antibiotics. She was told everything else was fine. Her shortness of breath failed to improve, however. She was then referred by her primary care physician to me, because surely there was something wrong with her heart.
As I walked into the exam room, I noticed she was very pale looking and very anxious appearing. As part of her history she told me that several years ago, she underwent gastric bypass surgery. I asked her if she had blood work done, because my immediate suspicion was that she was anemic. She told me she had it done as recently at the time of her ER visit . My nurse started looking for the labs accessing another database ( even in the community I work, several "Electronic Medical Records" don't "talk" to each other) and not surprisingly, the young woman was profoundly anemic with a hemoglobin of 7.4 ( normal greater then 12), explaining her shortness of breath.
I don't know what's the saddest part of this story: the fact we don't "look" and "examine" our patients anymore, or being enamored by a CAT scan and completely forgetting to look at a basic blood count or being seen by several physicians, not one of them picking up on the fact that she is a set up for iron deficiency and other micro-nutritional abnormalities because of her gastric bypass surgery and then being referred to a Cardiologist. This is far from being an isolated case in our current outpatient model of HealthCare. The irony of course is that seeing 30-40 patient a day in clinic is bound to increase the cost rather than curtail it and surely with poorer overall outcomes."
" I recently saw a young woman referred to me for shortness of breath. She had been seen by several physicians and had a recent ER visit for this problem. A week prior she reported some atypical chest pain and a CT scan of the chest was done. She was diagnosed with a "small pneumonia" and given antibiotics. She was told everything else was fine. Her shortness of breath failed to improve, however. She was then referred by her primary care physician to me, because surely there was something wrong with her heart.
As I walked into the exam room, I noticed she was very pale looking and very anxious appearing. As part of her history she told me that several years ago, she underwent gastric bypass surgery. I asked her if she had blood work done, because my immediate suspicion was that she was anemic. She told me she had it done as recently at the time of her ER visit . My nurse started looking for the labs accessing another database ( even in the community I work, several "Electronic Medical Records" don't "talk" to each other) and not surprisingly, the young woman was profoundly anemic with a hemoglobin of 7.4 ( normal greater then 12), explaining her shortness of breath.
I don't know what's the saddest part of this story: the fact we don't "look" and "examine" our patients anymore, or being enamored by a CAT scan and completely forgetting to look at a basic blood count or being seen by several physicians, not one of them picking up on the fact that she is a set up for iron deficiency and other micro-nutritional abnormalities because of her gastric bypass surgery and then being referred to a Cardiologist. This is far from being an isolated case in our current outpatient model of HealthCare. The irony of course is that seeing 30-40 patient a day in clinic is bound to increase the cost rather than curtail it and surely with poorer overall outcomes."
Sunday, August 18, 2019
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