Hemodynamics: HOCM, aortic stenosis, valve area equations, pitfalls of guidelines cutoffs for AS +MS
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- čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
- 0:00 LV-aortic pressure gradient tracings: HOCM vs AS, and HOCM features
03:37 Features of AS
12:27: Features of HOCM, HOCM cases, Brockenbrough, spontaneous gradient changes
29:12 AS case. Pitfalls, including technical issues
34:39 Valve area equations for AS and MS (Gorlin, Hakki)
40:40 Consequence of Gorlin equation: gradient dependency on flow
41:47 Misalignment of valve area and gradient cutoffs in both AS and MS
43:28 Marked lability of MS gradient and its poor prediction of MS severity
49:54 Assessment of vaalve stenosis in AF
54:00 End-hole vs side-hole catheter in HOCM and in AS.
LVOT acceleration and pressure gradient in AS
Thank you dear prof for all you do .
Excellent sir, I don't miss your lecture. Read from your book and listen to your lecture.
Sir kindly give a lecture on practical approach to SYNCOPE with particular emphasis on tilt table Tests with example. I will be obliged.
Thank you greatly 😊
Thank you greatly
Very nice presentation
U are a blessing
❤
Dr.Hanna, when we do simultaneous LV-Ao pressure tracing sometimes the mean gradient from area under the curve is not equal and higher than peak-to-peak gradient.
Which gradient that you use for AVA measurement? I had a patient that when I used the mean gradient the AVA by Hakki is 1 cm2. So I was not sure how to classify the severity of AS. Hope you can enlighten me.
I have seen those situations many times before. That is one reason I mentioned AVA by cath is better than echo, but not perfect. You also may get significant variability of thermodilution CO measurements affecting AVA calculation. If you look at the original Hakki paper from Circulation 1981, comparing HAkki equation to Gorlin, the correlation with Gorlin was strong (r 0.96) whether you use mean or peak-to-peak gradient. ~25% of patients had mean gradient that is higher than peak to peak, as in your case, which translates into 0.1-0.2 cm2 difference in AVA calculation between the 2 ways of doing Hakki but also with the Gorlin calculation (which can be higher or lower than either one, it does not better correlate with either one). I suggest the following:
1)IF the patient is in AF, take the beat with highest peak-to-peak and the beat with the highest mean, don't use the computer averages
2)One reason for mean >peak-to-peak is delay in the aortic pressure transducing more than LV pressure (eg, longer tubing on the aortic catheter). In those cases, make sure to shift the aortic waveform leftward on the software to make the LV upslope bisect the aortic dip. Mean gradient may end up being lower
3)If mean is truly higher than peak-to-peak, and AVA calculations are discrepant, make sure to measure indexed AVA. Remember that AVA2000 in men or 1200 in women establishes severe AS in this context
Thanks a lot for the comprehensive answer Dr.Hanna 👍👍. I really learn a lot from your videos and book
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