Outline of cardiology

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to cardiology, the branch of medicine dealing with disorders of the human heart.[1] The field includes medical diagnosis and treatment of congenital heart defects, coronary artery disease, heart failure, valvular heart disease and electrophysiology. Physicians who specialize in cardiology are called cardiologists.

What type of thing is cardiology?

Cardiology can be described as all of the following:

Branches of cardiology

  • Adult cardiology –
    • Cardiac electrophysiology – study of the electrical properties and conduction diseases of the heart.
      • Clinical cardiac electrophysiology –Clinical cardiac electrophysiology, is a branch of the medical specialty of cardiology and is concerned with the study and treatment of rhythm disorders of the heart. Cardiologists with expertise in this area are usually referred to as electrophysiologists. Electrophysiologists are trained in the mechanism, function, and performance of the electrical activities of the heart.
    • Cardiogeriatrics (geriatric cardiology) –Cardiogeriatrics, or geriatric cardiology, is the branch of cardiology and geriatric medicine that deals with the cardiovascular disorders in elderly people.
    • ultrasound
      to study the mechanical function/physics of the heart.
    • diseases of the heart
      .
    • Nuclear cardiology – use of nuclear medicine
      to visualize the uptake of an isotope by the heart using radioactive sources.
  • Pediatric cardiology – Pediatric cardiologists specialize in diagnosing and treating heart problems in children.

Anatomy of the heart

Heart

Physical exam

The cardiac

physical exam
focuses on portions of the physical exam that elucidate information about diseases and disorders outlined below. Clinical judgment, of course, should guide the physical exam but the following are pertinent things related to a general / broad cardiac exam.

Heart disorders

Procedures to counter coronary artery disease

An example of a drug-eluting stent. This is the TAXUS Express2 Paclitaxel-Eluting Coronary Stent System, which releases paclitaxel.

Coronary artery disease is not currently reversible and eventually requires surgical management if it progresses.

  • internal mammary artery or saphenous vein
    can be used as grafts. The grafts are used to provide an alternate path for blood flow around a stenosis.
  • Enhanced external counterpulsation
    (EECP): Pneumatically assisting the heart to move blood using inflatable cuffs on the legs.
  • Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) – Procedures to treat stenotic coronary arteries by accessing through a blood vessel. Angioplasty in this manner is PTCA (described below) but may also involve the insertion of stents to keep vessels open.
  • Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA): Insertion of a catheter through the skin ("percutaneous") into a blood vessel ("transluminal") to enlarging the lumen of a coronary artery by forcibly expanding it with a balloon ("angioplasty"), hence the name. It is a form of PCI and generally what is implied when referring to "PCI."
  • Atherectomy – Enlarging the lumen of an artery by removal of atherosclerotic plaque by means of catheterization. This is in contrast to angioplasty that does not remove the plaque but merely pushes it out of the way to increase the lumen size. This method is primarily used in peripheral disease, but has been used for coronary disease as well.
  • Endarterectomy – Enlarging the lumen of an artery by removal of atherosclerotic plaque by means of open surgery. This is primarily done on the carotid arteries (Carotid endarterectomy or CEA) but was first performed on the superficial femoral artery. While not performed on coronary arteries, it is mentioned here for completeness.
  • Stenting: Enlarging the lumen of an artery by forcibly expanding it with a metal wire tube by means of catheterization. Typically, the artery is expanded first through angioplasty (see PTCA above).

Devices used in cardiology

A stethoscope.
  • lung sounds
    . Electronic stethoscopes can amplify and record sounds.
  • EKG calipers – A type of
    EKGs
    . Special rulers can be used to measure the intervals as well.
  • Devices used to maintain normal electrical rhythm:
    • Pacemaker
      – An implanted electrical device that replaces the heart's natural pacemaker.
    • Defibrillator – Electrical devices to alter the heart's rhythm with electrical energy. As the name implies, a defibrillator is used to stop fibrillation of the heart. It can be used to cardiovert atrial fibrillation if certain conditions are met, but is mainly used to cardiovert ventricular fibrillation which is life-threatening. Contrary to popular media's use, a defibrillator cannot and should not be used for asystole (a "flatline") as it has been shown to be ineffective in restoring a rhythm. If a person is in a rhythm not convertible by a defibrillator, then cardiopulmonary resuscitation
      (CPR) or more advanced care should be started.
  • Devices used to maintain blood pressure:
    • Artificial heart – An internal pump that wholly replaces the pumping action of the heart.
    • Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) / heart-lung machine: External pump to take over the function of both the heart and lungs. Commonly used in cardiothoracic surgery when the heart is being operated on for such surgeries like open valve replacement or CABG on the posterior side of the heart. The bypass machine is responsible for oxygenation of blood, removal of carbon dioxide, heating the blood (heat is lost from being outside the body) to maintain core body temperature or cooling blood for controlled hypothermia, and providing volatile anesthetics (e.g., isoflurane) if the lungs are not ventilated during bypass (the movement can be problematic while performing surgery). A cardioplegic solution is used to stop the heart from beating and combination with hypothermia reduces oxygen demand of the heart significantly (>97%) such that surgery is possible without causing damage.
    • Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP): A balloon placed in the thoracic aorta to supplement cardiac output from the heart. It pulsates opposite to the heart such that it inflates during diastole and relaxes during systole. Deflation during systole decreases afterload (vacuum effect), thus decreasing myocardial oxygen demand, and inflates during diastole to increase diastolic pressure which increases coronary artery perfusion of the endocardium (the heart perfuses itself during diastole, not systole).
    • Ventricular assist device (VAD) – Internal pump to supplement or replace the pumping action of a ventricle. Can be referred to RVAD or LVAD depending on if it's attached to the right or left ventricle.

Diagnostic tests and procedures

ECG
indicator

Various cardiology diagnostic tests and procedures.

Drugs

There are several classes of

pharmaceutical drugs
used in cardiology to manage various diseases and many of them have cardiovascular side effects.

Drugs for the cardiovascular system

Drugs that manipulate the cardiovascular system do so through several ways. The first is

arrhythmias
. The second is receptors of various types. The third is manipulation of enzymes.

Ion channels

Ion channels are responsible for cell membrane voltage, depolarization, and repolarization. These actions lead to conduction of signals down nerves and contraction of cardiomyocytes. Perhaps the most prominent manipulation of ion channels is through antiarrhythmic agents. These agents are commonly classified by the type of ion they manipulate and named the

Vaughan Williams classification
:

Specifically, types I, III, & IV manipulate ion channels while the others are not.

Receptors

The adrenergic receptor is a set of receptors that are commonly manipulated. Four properties of the heart —

inotropy, & lusitropy
— are manipulated by adrenergic receptors. For example, the
isoproterenol
) that manipulate the adrenergic receptors and have variable specificity for the receptors and are, thus, used for various reasons.

that are linked to hypertension and heart failure, mainly through vasodilation & heart remodeling inhibition.

Enzymes

ACE inhibitors works upstream from angiotensin II receptor antagonists and have similar effects on management of hypertension and heart failure.

Sodium nitroprusside and nitroglycerin function by causing vasodilation through nitric oxide, which manipulates cGMP levels through guanylate cyclase.

anticoagulation therapy
. This is important in those predisposed to blood clots (e.g., Factor V Leiden) but also for thrombus formation when an atherosclerotic plaque rupture that would, otherwise, lead to myocardial infarction.

Drugs with cardiovascular side effects

Numerous drug classes have well-known cardiovascular side effects.

  • Anesthetics – As a general rule, all agents used in anesthesia have depressant effects on the cardiovascular system with the notable exception of ketamine.
  • ChemotherapyDoxorubicin is one agent known to have heart toxicity (leads to dilated cardiomyopathy). Another is trastuzumab. Immune checkpoint inhibitors can also lead to cardiotoxicity.
  • Diuretics
    – The primary effect of diuretics is removal of intravascular volume, which then has secondary benefits to the cardiovascular system in diseases like heart failure.
  • Lithium – Teratogenic effect of causing Ebstein's anomaly in mothers taking lithium.
  • Opioids – Decreases blood pressure.
  • trigeminy
    . SSRI's also have interactions with anti-coagulation therapy and increases the risk of bleeding while on them.
  • Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRI) – Due to manipulation of norepinephrine, SNRI's can cause hypertension and so hypertension should be reduced before starting an SNRI.
  • Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) – TCAs behave like type Ia antiarrhythmics and could terminate ventricular fibrillation and decrease contractility. They can also cause tachycardia and hypotension.

Cardiology organizations

Cardiology publications

Persons influential in cardiology

See also

References

  1. PMID 20821845
    . Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  2. .
  3. .
  4. ^ "What Are the Signs and Symptoms of an Arrhythmia?". National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. July 1, 2011. Retrieved 7 March 2015.

External links