Clinically Speaking
What's that Murmur?
Rubbed the Wrong Way
The Who, What, Why, and How
Broken Heart?
100
Aortic stenosis will eventually lead to _________ overload
Pressure
100
A systolic crescendo-decrescendo murmur loudest over the aorta
Aortic stenosis
100
The most striking clinical finding of pericarditis
friction rub
100
The main cause of calcific aortic stenosis
Normal wear and tear
100
The essential test following suspected pericarditis
echocardiogram
200
These are some of the serious complications seen with mitral valve prolapse
Infective endocarditis, mitral insufficiency, stroke, arrhythmias
200
Early diastolic, blowing murmur
Aortic regurgitation
200
Patients frequently take this position to relieve pain from acute pericarditis
Leaning forward
200
People with this congenital defect are more likely to develop aortic stenosis.
Bicuspid aortic valve
200
This pericarditis occurs days to weeks after an MI
Dressler syndrome
300
A complication seen in the aortic valve as a result of chronic rheumatic heart disease.
"fish mouth" appearance, fusion of commissures.
300
Systolic murmur with mid-systolic click
Mitral valve prolapse
300
Indicated by muffled heart sounds, this condition occurs when a large amount of fluid enters the pericardial space
Cardiac tamponade
300
These distinct lesions appear in the heart during rheumatic heart disease
Aschoff bodies
300
The most common cause of infective endocarditis
Streptococcus viridans
400
Aortic stenosis can lead to this condition of the blood
Hemolytic anemia
400
Holosystolic blowing murmur
Mirtal regurgitation
400
A condition in which the heart can no longer increase cardiac output in response to stress
Constrictive pericarditis
400
The unique distribution of vegetation seen with Libman-Sacks endocarditis
Both sides of valve leaflets
400
An aschoff body consists of this
foci of t-lymphocytes, anitischkow cells
500
Head bobbing is a result of this condition caused by aortic regurgitation.
Hyperdymanic circulation
500
Opening snap, followed by a diastolic rumble
Mitral stenosis
500
Kidney disease contributes to pericardial effusion in this way.
Uremia. It results from inflammation of the visceral and parietal pericardium and correlates with the degree of azotemia.
500
The cause of acute rheumatic fever
Molecular mimicry, bacterial M protein similar to human tissues
500
The five major manifestations of the Jones criteria
Migratory polyartiritis, pancarditis, subcutaneous nodules, erythemia marginatum, syndenham chorea