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and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium
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Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician

Thomas R. Burklow, MDAsst C., Pediatric CardiologyWalter Reed Army Medical CenterNational Capital Consortium

Page 2: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Cardiac emergencies

Congestive heart failureHypercyanotic spellsTachyarrhythmiasHypertensive crisis

Page 3: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

How do you know you are dealing with a cardiac emergency?

Page 4: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Case Presentation #1

4 month old presents to ER with cc: “cold symptoms”

5 day history of increasing cough; afebrile, no rhinorrhea, no ill contacts.

PMH: unremarkable. vigorous feeder (25-30oz/d) until the last couple of days.

FHx: father had a “leaky valve” but was cleared to join the Marines

Page 5: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Physical Examination

VS: HR 165, RR 60, normal BP throughout; RA O2 sat mid 80’s, increases to 97% on 1/4 L/ O2

Small for age male, nondysmorphic, mild cyanosis, moderate increased work of breathing

Left chest prominent Prominent PMI, RRR, S2 obscured by murmur,

gr III pansystolic SRM over apex to left axilla Liver edge 4 cm below RCM 1+ pulses throughout

Page 6: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Electrocardiogram

Page 7: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Chest X ray

Page 8: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

What is the pathological condition which is present in this infant?

What information supports this supposition?

What do you do?

Page 9: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Clinical manifestations

Infant feeding

difficulties failure to thrive diaphoresis tachycardia tachypnea

Child breathlessness tachycardia tachypnea peripheral

edema cardiomegaly

Page 10: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

What causes congestive heart failure?

Excessive work load: pressure or volume

Normal workload faced by a damaged myocardium

Page 11: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Etiologies

Neonate dysfunction volume pressure

Infant Volume Dysfunction

Child Palliated congenital

heart disease AV valve

regurgitation Acute rheumatic

fever Myocarditis Endocarditis

Page 12: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Neonatal congestive heart failure

Dysfunction Myocarditis Cardiomyopathy—think inborn error of metabolism Coronary artery anomaly Arrhythmias

Volume Unrestrictive ventricular septal defect(s) Truncus arteriosus

Pressure—think ductal-dependent left-sided obstruction

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome Critical aortic stenosis Critical coarctation of the aorta

Page 13: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

CHF in infants and children

Dysfunction Myocarditis Cardiomyopathy—think inborn error of metabolism Coronary artery anomaly Palliated congenital heart disease Arrhythmias

Volume Unrestrictive ventricular septal defect(s) Severe atrioventricular valve dysfunction Truncus arteriosus Palliated congenital heart disease

Page 14: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.
Page 15: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

How do you know what entity you are dealing with?...

Age An apparently well neonate who develops CHF

at 1-2 weeks...consider a ductal-dependent lesion

An apparently well child without known heart disease develops CHF…consider myocarditis

Fetal history of “irregular heart beats” Duration of symptoms Prior history of surgery Family history Travel history

Page 16: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Assessment--physical examination

Identify signs and symptoms of congestive heart failure

Blood pressures Pulse oximetry Presence of murmur MAY be helpful

Page 17: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Treatment

Digitalis oral: 8-10 mcg/kg/day I.V.: 80% of oral dose Because of varying metabolism, appropriate dose

varies by age Rapid digitalization

May be performed over 12-24 hours, 6-12 hours in dire situations

Calculate TDD (varies by age); administer 1/2 of TDD, followed by 1/4, then 1/4 of TDD

Case example: patient weight is 5.5 kg

Page 18: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Case example

5.5 kg in a 4 month old Oral TDD for 1 month-2 years is 30-50 mcg/kg

TDD is 220 mcg Administer 110 mcg now, then 55 mcg in 12

hours, then 55 mcg in 6 hours IV dose is 80% of the above amounts

Maintenance digoxin is approximately 1/4 of TDD, divided b.i.d., or at 50 mcg/cc, 0.1 cc/kg per dose b.i.d.

Page 19: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Digoxin toxicity

Levels are helpful only in cases of suspected toxicity, not for management

GI symptoms are common presenting symptoms: nausea, vomiting, anorexia

Most common sign of cardiac toxicity is arrhythmia: bradycardia, AV block, PVCs

Treatment includes holding doses for 1-2 half lives, atropine for sinus bradycardia, and “FAB” fragments in cases of significant toxicity

Page 20: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Other medications

Diuretics Furosemide (Lasix); 0.5-1.0 mg/kg/dose Chlorothiazide (Diuril); 20-50 mg/kg/day Spironolactone (Aldactone); 1-2 mg/kg/day

Afterload reduction Captopril (Capoten); 0.1-0.5 mg/kg/dose t.i.d. Enalapril (Vasotec); 0.1 mg/kg/day

Beta-blocker Labetolol Carvediolol

Page 21: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

A couple words regarding critical left sided obstructive lesion…

Page 22: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Critical obstruction to cardiac output

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome Critical aortic stenosis Critical coarctation of the aorta

The common endpoint for these three lesions is loss of systemic cardiac output when the ductus closes….

Page 23: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Physiology of hypoplastic left heart

Page 24: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

STOP

Page 25: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Prostaglandin

PGE1

Powerful ductal dilator Mechanism of ductal closure

High oxygen tension Circulating prostaglandins Genetic predetermination

Page 26: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Prostaglandin dosing

Starting dose: 0.1 mcg/kg/min

Or… One ampule is 500 mcg/1 cc Mix one amp in 82 cc of normal saline Run resulting mixture at 1 cc/kg/hr, this will

be equivalent to 0.1 mcg/kg/min

Page 27: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Case presentation #2

Two month old African-american infant presents to the 2 month well baby visit

Mother has no concerns: feeding well, no tachypnea.

Family history is unremarkable

Page 28: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Physical Examination

VS: HR 180; RR 25, BP 85/45, room air oxygen saturations 84%

Ht 25th percentile, Wt 25th percentile General features: non-dysmorphic

infant female Abdomen: Liver edge palpable at

RCM Ext: 2+ radial and femoral pulses

Page 29: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Cardiovascular examination

Prominent right ventricular impulse, subxiphoid

Normal S1 with a single S2 Harsh systolic murmur noted at the left

mid-upper sternal border, with radiation to back and axilla

Diastole: quiet Extra cardiac sounds: none

Page 30: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Electrocardiogram

Page 31: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Chest radiograph

Page 32: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

While discussing the most likely diagnosis with the parents, you are called away. However, you are urgently called back to the examination room by the clinic nurse. The parents state that while the infant was crying, her complexion became intensely dark (“she’s never done this before”) and becamely listless…

The pulse oximeter is reading a HR of 170 and an pulse oximetry reading of less than 70%. Upon auscultation, you note the murmur is diminished in intensity.

Page 33: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

?

Page 34: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Hypercyanotic spell

a.k.a. “Tet spell”, “paroxysmal hyperpnea” Etiology uncertain

“Infundibular spasm” Decrease in systemic vascular resistance

Goal of therapy is to increase pulmonary blood flow

Page 35: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.
Page 36: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

PVRPVR

Page 37: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

SVRSVR

Page 38: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Recognition of hypercyanotic spell

Symptoms include: irritability, crying, loss of consciousness

Physical examination may demonstrate tachypnea, deepening of cyanosis, and loss of systolic ejection murmur

Laboratory data would reveal metabolic acidosis

Page 39: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

Treatment

Soothing Knee-chest positioning Morphine, 0.1-0.2 mg/kg IV or SC Oxygen (perhaps limited value) Intravenous volume expansion, 10 cc/kg isotonic Sodium bicarbonate 1-2 mEq/kg/dose Propanolol, 0.15-0.25 mg/kg IV over 2-5 minutes Phenylephrine, 0.1 mg/kg IM or SC General anesthesia

Page 40: Cardiac emergencies and the Pediatrician Thomas R. Burklow, MD Asst C., Pediatric Cardiology Walter Reed Army Medical Center National Capital Consortium.

The End…for now