Aortic regurgitation
From WikiAnesthesia
Revision as of 07:06, 3 December 2021 by Olivia Sutton (talk | contribs)
Aortic regurgitation
Anesthetic relevance | |
---|---|
Anesthetic management |
{{{anesthetic_management}}} |
Specialty | |
Signs and symptoms | |
Diagnosis | |
Treatment | |
Article quality | |
Editor rating | |
User likes | 0 |
Provide a brief summary of this comorbidity here.
Anesthetic implications
Preoperative optimization
- Increased risk of perioperative cardiovascular decompensation
Intraoperative management
- Hemodynamic goals are to maintain forward flow and decrease regurgitant volume
- Preload: normal-high to augment CO
- Afterload: low-normal to promote forward flow
- Rate: high-normal
- Rhythm: sinus (rate more important)
- Contractility: high-normal
Postoperative management
Related surgical procedures
Pathophysiology
- Hemodynamic sequelae of AI:
- LA distension > Volume overload > Subendothelial ischemia
- CHF > pulmonary edema
- RV failure > pulmonary HTN
- In acute AI, sudden increase in LV volume can induce cardiogenic shock and pulmonary edema
Signs and symptoms
Diagnosis
Treatment
Medication
- Diuretics, anticoagulants
Surgery
Prognosis
Epidemiology
References
Top contributors: Olivia Sutton and Chris Rishel