You are in: eMedicine Specialties > Pediatrics: Cardiac Disease and Critical Care Medicine > Cardiology Mitral Stenosis, AcquiredArticle Last Updated: Aug 23, 2006AUTHOR AND EDITOR INFORMATIONAuthor: M Silvana Horenstein, MD, Associate in Pediatric and Fetal Cardiac Diagnostic, Diagnostico Gineco-Obstetrico, PC; Associate Director, Legacy Department, Best Doctors, Inc M Silvana Horenstein is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Cardiology, and American Medical Association Coauthor(s): Michael Pettersen, MD, Director of Echocardiography, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Michigan, Assistant Professor, Wayne State University School of Medicine; Henry Walters III, MD, Associate Professor of Surgery, Wayne State University School of Medicine; Chief, Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Children's Hospital of Michigan Editors: Ira H Gessner, MD, Professor Emeritus, Pediatric Cardiology; Mary L Windle, PharmD, Adjunct Assistant Professor, University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Editor, eMedicine.com, Inc; Julian M Stewart, MD, PhD, Director of Center for Pediatric Hypotension, Professor, Departments of Pediatrics and Physiology, Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College; Gilbert Herzberg, MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Section of Pediatric Cardiology, New York Medical College; Stuart Berger, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, Division of Cardiology, Medical College of Wisconsin; Chief of Pediatric Cardiology, Medical Director of Pediatric Heart Transplant Program, Medical Director of The Heart Center, Children's Hospital of Wisconsin Author and Editor Disclosure Synonyms and related keywords: acquired mitral stenosis, MS, mitral inflow obstruction, rheumatic heart disease, group A streptococcal pharyngitis, rheumatic fever, mitral valve stenosis, acquired mitral stenosis, acquired MS, fibrosis of the mitral ring, valve stenosis, mitral regurgitation, MR, rheumatic MS, rheumatic mitral valve disease INTRODUCTIONBackgroundAcquired mitral stenosis (MS), or mitral valve stenosis, is virtually synonymous with rheumatic heart disease. Rheumatic fever occurs, in genetically susceptible individuals, as a complication of group A streptococcal infection. Other rare causes of acquired MS include carcinoid causes, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and some mucopolysaccharidoses. The underlying pathological process is a diffuse inflammation of connective tissue. Not all group A streptococcal infections lead to rheumatic fever. Studies demonstrate that rheumatic fever follows infection of the upper respiratory tract and rarely, if ever, follows skin infection. Similarly, not all cases of streptococcal pharyngitis lead to rheumatic fever. In fact, only 2-3% of patients with untreated group A streptococcal pharyngitis develop this complication. Appropriate treatment of streptococcal pharyngitis prevents rheumatic fever. Rheumatic heart disease primarily affects the mitral valve with mitral regurgitation (MR), or mitral valve regurgitation, as the initial hemodynamic consequence. Lesions of the mitral valve begin as deposits of fibrin and red blood cells that form small verrucae along the borders of the mitral valve leaflets. When the inflammation subsides, the verrucae are replaced by fibrous tissue. Over at least several years, the individual may then develop fibrosis of the mitral ring; contracture of the mitral leaflets, chordae tendineae, and papillary muscles; and commisural adhesions resulting in valve stenosis. Rheumatic heart disease, therefore, is a lifelong, and sometimes progressive, disease. Definition Mitral valve stenosis results from a pathologic process that narrows the effective mitral valve orifice. Proper function of the mitral valve requires an intact mitral valve apparatus and satisfactory left ventricle (LV) function. Anatomy The mitral valve is the inlet valve to the LV. The normal mitral valve is a complex apparatus composed of an annulus and two leaflets that are attached to two papillary muscles by chordae tendineae. The papillary muscles arise from the walls of the LV and secure the chordae and mitral leaflets, preventing prolapse of the valve during ventricular systole. Anatomy of subtypes Mitral valve stenosis, such as in rheumatic fever, occurs because of fibrous scarring of the valve leaflets with subsequent calcification, thereby decreasing the size of the effective valve orifice. Subvalvular and supravalvular MS are congenital anomalies (see Mitral Stenosis, Congenital). PathophysiologyThe normal adult mitral valve orifice cross-sectional area is 4-6 cm2. When reduced to 2 cm2, hemodynamically significant MS occurs. At 1 cm2, obstruction to blood flow into the LV becomes critical because a left atrial mean pressure of 25 mm Hg is necessary to maintain normal cardiac output. Elevated left atrial pressure is transmitted to the pulmonary veins and pulmonary capillaries. Congested bronchial veins encroach on small bronchioles and cause subsequent increase in airway resistance. In addition, elevated hydrostatic pressure in the capillaries forces fluid into the alveoli and interstitial space, producing pulmonary congestion. As a compensating mechanism, pulmonary vasoconstriction develops, causing pulmonary hypertension. At this stage, the right ventricle (RV) faces an increased afterload, leading to RV hypertrophy. Over time, fixed pulmonary arterial hypertension may develop from medial hypertrophy and intimal thickening of the pulmonary arterioles. RV myocardial dysfunction may develop, resulting in tricuspid valve regurgitation. Severe MS results in decreased cardiac output. If reduction in cardiac output is critical, end organ failure with shock, metabolic acidosis, and renal and/or hepatic insufficiency can occur. In addition, RV failure provokes systemic venous congestion with development of hepatomegaly, ascites, and pedal edema. Natural history Patients may remain asymptomatic for many years as long as the MS is mild and not accompanied by more than mild MR. These patients, of course, are susceptible to further damage to the mitral valve with repeated group A streptococcal pharyngitis. For this reason, ongoing antibiotic prophylaxis is recommended. By the second or third decade of life, calcium deposits further constrict the effective mitral orifice of the already damaged mitral valve. Once the effective valvular orifice decreases significantly, symptoms occur. In developing countries, rheumatic MS manifests 10-30 years after the initial rheumatic insult to the mitral valve. In developed countries, this latent period may be as long as 50 years. FrequencyUnited StatesAcquired MS is exceedingly rare in the pediatric population in the United States. Acquired MS secondary to rheumatic fever remains the most common form of MS that occurs in adulthood. Current estimates indicate that the prevalence of rheumatic fever in the United States is less than 1 case per 100,000 people. A steady decline has been observed in the incidence of rheumatic fever and, thus, in acquired MS. InternationalIn some developing countries, such as India, the prevalence of rheumatic fever is 100-150 per 100,000 people. Following development of rheumatic heart disease, evidence of MS may develop as early as the teenage years, presumably because of a more aggressive initial attack and/or recurrent bouts of rheumatic fever (consequences of suboptimal or absent antibiotic prophylaxis). In some developing countries, the prevalence of rheumatic heart disease in children is 5-15 per 1000 people. Mortality/MorbidityIf symptoms are absent or minimal, the overall 10-year survival rate of untreated patients with MS is 80%.
RaceGenetic predisposition plays a significant role in occurrence of rheumatic fever after group A streptococcal infection. Family studies suggest that susceptibility to the disease involves a single recessive gene. SexRheumatic fever affects both sexes equally. However, in those who acquire rheumatic heart disease, MS is more common in women. Reasons for this are unknown.
AgeRheumatic fever is a disease of childhood, its incidence paralleling that of streptococcal pharyngitis. MS usually arises in persons older than 15-20 years because the disease progresses to that stage over many years. This time interval is significantly shorter in developing countries. CLINICALHistoryPatients with mild MS may deny all symptoms. They may provide a history consistent with acute rheumatic fever, although in a given patient an inverse relationship between the severity of rheumatic heart disease and the severity of rheumatic arthritis tends to exist. The most prominent symptom of severe MS is dyspnea. This results from pulmonary congestion. Patients with severe MS may also experience orthopnea as well as significant exercise limitation. MS due to rheumatic heart disease rarely occurs in childhood in the United States. When it does occur, the history generally reveals the insidious onset of exercise limitation. These patients may present with certain signs.
PhysicalPhysical examination findings vary according to the severity of MS.
CausesIn order to develop MS from acute rheumatic fever, two conditions are required: infection with group A streptococcus and genetic susceptibility to develop valvular disease.
DIFFERENTIALSCor Triatriatum Mitral Stenosis, Congenital Mitral Stenosis, Supravalvular Ring Pulmonary Hypertension, Idiopathic
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| Drug Name | Furosemide (Lasix) |
|---|---|
| Description | Acts by inhibiting absorption of sodium and chloride in proximal and distal tubules and in the loop of Henle, thereby promoting excretion of sodium chloride and water. Acts as a diuretic and antihypertensive. |
| Adult Dose | 20-80 mg/d PO/IV divided q6-12h; not to exceed 600 mg/d |
| Pediatric Dose | 0.5-2 mg/kg per dose PO/IV/IM q8-24h; not to exceed 6 mg/kg/d |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; hepatic coma; anuria; severe electrolyte depletion |
| Interactions | May increase aminoglycoside ototoxicity; may be ototoxic if used with ethacrynic acid; salicylate toxicity in patients receiving high doses of these concomitantly; decreases lithium renal clearance with subsequent increase in lithium toxicity; potentiation of antihypertensive drugs (eg, ganglionic or peripheral adrenergic blockers); simultaneous sucralfate or indomethacin administration may reduce natriuretic and antihypertensive effects |
| Pregnancy | C - Safety for use during pregnancy has not been established. |
| Precautions | Severely oliguric patients may be ototoxic; may precipitate gout (rare); excessive diuresis in MS may compromise cardiac output by reducing preload; also may precipitate circulatory collapse with thromboembolism; may cause electrolyte imbalance (hypokalemic-hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis, hyponatremia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia); caution in hepatic disease; prolonged use in premature infants may result in nephrocalcinosis; alterations in glucose tolerance test results and precipitation of diabetes mellitus (rare) have occurred |
These agents are used to prevent potassium depletion induced by more potent loop diuretics (eg, furosemide).
| Drug Name | Spironolactone (Aldactone) |
|---|---|
| Description | Used to decrease edema resulting from excessive aldosterone excretion. Inhibits aldosterone-dependent sodium-potassium exchange site in the distal convoluted renal tubule, thereby retaining potassium and excreting sodium and water. Serves as a diuretic and antihypertensive agent. |
| Adult Dose | 25-100 mg/d PO divided bid/qid; not to exceed 200 mg/d |
| Pediatric Dose | 1-3.3 mg/kg/d PO divided bid/qid; not to exceed 200 mg/d |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; anuria; renal failure; hyperkalemia |
| Interactions | May potentiate ganglionic-blocking agents; may potentiate antihypertensive drugs; may induce severe hyperkalemia when administered with ACE inhibitors or indomethacin; increases digoxin half-life, increasing risk of developing digitalis toxicity; potassium and potassium-sparing diuretics may increase toxicity of spironolactone; may decrease effect of anticoagulants |
| Pregnancy | D - Unsafe in pregnancy |
| Precautions | Caution in renal and hepatic impairment; may cause hyperkalemia, especially when administered with ACE inhibitors; GI distress, rash, and gynecomastia have been reported with its use; may cause transient elevation of BUN level, especially if preexisting renal impairment; may cause mild metabolic acidosis; few cases of agranulocytosis have been reported; tumorigenic in rats when administered in excess |
These agents are mainly used in MS in atrial flutter or fibrillation because of its antiarrhythmic properties. Digoxin is not expected to improve overall cardiac function because, in MS patients, heart failure is from mechanical obstruction causing elevated left atrial pressure, with subsequent transmission to RV and, ultimately, failure. Theoretically, digoxin could aid in improving RV dysfunction.
| Drug Name | Digoxin (Lanoxin) |
|---|---|
| Description | Digitalis glycoside that inhibits sodium-potassium ATPase (enzyme that extrudes sodium and brings potassium into myocyte). Resulting increase in intracellular sodium stimulates sodium-calcium exchange, extruding sodium and bringing in calcium with consequent increase in myocyte contractility. Exerts vagomimetic action on sinus and AV nodes (slowing heart rate and conduction). Also decreases degree of activation of sympathetic nervous system and renin-angiotensin system, referred to as the deactivating effect. Therapeutic serum level range is 0.8-2 ng/mL. |
| Adult Dose | Digitalizing dose: 10-15 mcg/kg/d (approximately 0.75-1.5 mg/d) PO 8-12 mcg/kg/d (approximately 0.5-1 mg/d) IV/IM Maintenance dose: 2.5-5 mcg/kg/d (approximately 0.125-0.5 mg/d PO) PO 2-3 mcg/kg/d (approximately 0.1-0.4 mg/d) IV/IM qd May accomplish digitalization by administering half of total digitalizing dose (TDD) in first dose, followed by 2 doses that are one fourth TDD administered at 8- to 12-h intervals |
| Pediatric Dose | Infants: Digitalizing dose: 30 mcg/kg/d PO; 20 mcg/kg/d IV/IM Maintenance dose: 8-10 mcg/kg/d PO; 6-8 mcg/kg/d IV/IM divided bid <2 years: Digitalizing dose: 40-50 mcg/kg/d PO; 30-40 mcg/kg/d IV/IM Maintenance dose: 10-12 mcg/kg/d PO; 7.5-9 mcg/kg/d IV/IM divided bid 2-10 years: Digitalizing dose: 30-40 mcg/kg/d PO; 20-30 mcg/kg/d IV/IM Maintenance dose: 8-10 mcg/kg/d PO; 6-8 mcg/kg/d IV/IM divided bid May accomplish digitalization by administering half of TDD in first dose, followed by 2 doses that are one fourth TDD administered at 8- to 12-h intervals |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; ventricular fibrillation; beriberi heart disease; idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis; constrictive pericarditis; carotid sinus syndrome |
| Interactions | Potassium-depleting diuretics predispose to digitalis toxicity; calcium IV administered rapidly predisposes to serious arrhythmias; serum levels are raised by quinidine, verapamil, amiodarone, propafenone, indomethacin, itraconazole, alprazolam, spironolactone, erythromycin, clarithromycin, and tetracyclines; serum levels are decreased by rifampin |
| Pregnancy | C - Safety for use during pregnancy has not been established. |
| Precautions | May cause anorexia, nausea, emesis, and diarrhea; may cause blurred vision, headaches, dizziness, confusion, anxiety, depression, and hallucinations; gynecomastia occasionally occurs after prolonged use; in case of sinus node disease and in AV block, may cause severe bradycardia, sinoatrial block, or complete heart block; in WPW during atrial fibrillation or flutter, may cause ventricular fibrillation by increasing antegrade conduction through accessory pathway (bypassing AV node) May provoke ventricular fibrillation in patients treated with digoxin, cardioversion, or calcium infusion (prevented by pretreatment with lidocaine); may reach toxic levels in patients with impaired renal function because digoxin is excreted through kidneys; hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, or hypercalcemia may increase risk of toxicity (despite levels <2 ng/mL) because of hypersensitization of myocardium to digoxin |
These agents are used for atrial flutter or fibrillation. Beta-adrenergic receptor blocking agents are used as a second option when digoxin does not stop atrial flutter or fibrillation.
| Drug Name | Propranolol (Inderal) |
|---|---|
| Description | By blocking the beta-adrenergic receptor, these compounds blunt chronotropic, inotropic, and vasodilator responses of any beta-adrenergic stimulation. Beta-blockers lower ventricular rate; therefore, they are used in patients with atrial flutter or fibrillation. |
| Adult Dose | Emergent control: 1 mg per dose IV; may repeat q5min; not to exceed a cumulative dose of 5 mg Maintenance: 40-320 mg/d PO divided tid/qid |
| Pediatric Dose | Emergent control: 0.01-0.15 mg/kg per dose IV infused over 10 min; not to exceed 1 mg per dose Maintenance: 2-4 mg/kg/d PO divided tid/qid; not to exceed 16 mg/kg/d |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; uncompensated congestive heart failure; bradycardia; cardiogenic shock; AV conduction abnormalities |
| Interactions | Increases effects of reserpine and calcium channel blockers; NSAIDs may blunt effects; aluminum hydroxide gel reduces intestinal absorption; ethanol slows rate of absorption; phenytoin and rifampin accelerate clearance |
| Pregnancy | C - Safety for use during pregnancy has not been established. |
| Precautions | Caution in impaired hepatic or renal function; not indicated to treat hypertensive emergencies; risk of anaphylactic reaction unresponsive to usual doses of epinephrine in susceptible individuals; in IDDM, may prevent appearance of certain premonitory signs and symptoms of hypoglycemia (eg, increased heart rate and pressure changes); in thyrotoxicosis, may mask certain signs of hyperthyroidism, with exacerbation of symptoms of hyperthyroidism after withdrawal of propranolol; may produce hypotension, syncope, bronchospasm, nausea, emesis, hypoglycemia, lethargy or depression, or heart block |
| Drug Name | Esmolol (Brevibloc) |
|---|---|
| Description | Selective beta-1 (cardioselective)–adrenergic receptor blocking agent; may be used with class I antiarrhythmics if digoxin therapy does not abort atrial arrhythmia. Administer in patients needing prompt slowing of ventricular rate in response to atrial flutter or fibrillation and who are most likely to become hemodynamically unstable if left without treatment or in those waiting for the start of the therapeutic effects of digoxin (average, 10 h). Has rapid onset and short duration of action. Administered IV to stop atrial arrhythmia; afterward, patient is placed on class I antiarrhythmics for maintenance. |
| Adult Dose | Loading dose: 100-500 mcg/kg IV infused over 1 min Maintenance dose: 25-200 mcg/kg/min IV continuous infusion (gradually titrated upward in increments of 25-50 mcg/kg/min q5-10min); not to exceed 300 mg/kg/min because safety of higher dosages is unknown |
| Pediatric Dose | Administer as in adults |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; uncompensated CHF; bradycardia; cardiogenic shock; AV conduction abnormalities; second- or third-degree heart block |
| Interactions | Aluminum salts, barbiturates, NSAIDs, penicillins, calcium salts, cholestyramine, and rifampin may decrease bioavailability and plasma levels, possibly resulting in decreased pharmacologic effect; cardiotoxicity may increase when administered concurrently with sparfloxacin, astemizole, calcium channel blockers, quinidine, flecainide, and contraceptives Toxicity increases when administered concurrently with flecainide, acetaminophen, clonidine, epinephrine, nifedipine, prazosin, haloperidol, phenothiazines, and catecholamine-depleting agents; may increase digoxin level by 10-20%; morphine may increase level by 45% |
| Pregnancy | C - Safety for use during pregnancy has not been established. |
| Precautions | Beta-adrenergic blockers may mask signs and symptoms of acute hypoglycemia and clinical signs of hyperthyroidism; symptoms of hyperthyroidism, including thyroid storm may worsen when medication is abruptly withdrawn; withdraw drug slowly and monitor patient closely; administer only in monitored settings; may cause bronchospasm, wheezing, dyspnea, CHF, marked hypotension, bradycardia, nausea, emesis, dizziness, confusion, somnolence, seizures (occur in >1% of patients), asthenia, and depression |
These agents are used to stop atrial fibrillation and convert it into sinus rhythm. They can also decrease myocardial excitability.
| Drug Name | Procainamide (Pronestyl) |
|---|---|
| Description | Increases effective refractory period by reducing conduction velocity of atrial fibers and, to a lesser extent, the ERP of His-Purkinje and ventricles. Thus, decreases myocardial excitability and may speed AV node conduction (vagolytic effect). Therapeutic serum level range is 4-10 mg/L. |
| Adult Dose | Loading dose: 50-100 mg per dose IV 250-500 mg (immediate release) per dose PO q3-6h; not to exceed 1000 mg per dose Maintenance dose: 1-6 mg/min IV continuous infusion 2-4 g/d PO |
| Pediatric Dose | Loading dose: 2-6 mg/kg per dose IV over 5 min; not to exceed 100 mg per dose Maintenance dose: 20-80 mcg/kg/min IV continuous infusion; not to exceed 2 g/d 20-30 mg/kg/d IM divided q4-6h; not to exceed 4 g/d |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; SLE (may aggravate symptoms in myasthenia gravis, ie, worsening of symptoms); first-degree heart block; complete heart block (may cause asystole in torsade de pointes); decreasing cardiac contractility (may worsen CHF); renal failure |
| Interactions | Can expect increased levels of procainamide metabolite NAPA in patients taking cimetidine, ranitidine, beta-blockers, amiodarone, trimethoprim, and quinidine; may increase effect of skeletal muscle relaxants, quinidine, lidocaine, and neuromuscular blockers; ofloxacin inhibits tubular secretion and may increase bioavailability; when taken concurrently with sparfloxacin, may increase risk of cardiotoxicity |
| Pregnancy | C - Safety for use during pregnancy has not been established. |
| Precautions | May cause hypotension, lupuslike syndrome, hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, arrhythmias, anorexia, nausea, emesis, confusion, dizziness, depression, psychosis, and elevated liver enzymes; QRS widening >0.02 seconds (20 ms) suggests toxicity |
These agents are used after digoxin and/or beta-blockers that have not converted atrial arrhythmia.
| Drug Name | Propafenone (Rythmol) |
|---|---|
| Description | Class IC antiarrhythmic drug that exerts local anesthetic effects and has direct stabilizing action on myocardial cell membrane. Reduces upstroke velocity (phase 0) of action potential by reducing rapid inward current carried by sodium ions. Prolongs effective refractory period and reduces spontaneous automaticity. Prolongs AV node conduction and does not affect sinus node. |
| Adult Dose | Initial: 150 mg PO tid; not to exceed 450 mg/d Maintenance: May increase q3-4d to 225 mg PO tid; not to exceed 675 mg/d; if necessary, may increase up to 300 mg PO tid; not to exceed 900 mg/d |
| Pediatric Dose | Not established (limited data exist); 200-300 mg/m2/d PO divided tid/qid; may increase q2-3d; not to exceed 600 mg/m2/d |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; bronchospastic disorders; conduction disorders; bradycardia; uncontrolled heart failure |
| Interactions | Rifampin may decrease plasma levels; quinidine may increase pharmacologic effects; may increase plasma levels of beta-blockers, cyclosporine, warfarin, and digoxin; CYP4502D6 inhibitors (ritonavir, cimetidine, quinidine, beta-blockers, amiodarone) may increase serum levels and cardiotoxicity |
| Pregnancy | C - Safety for use during pregnancy has not been established. |
| Precautions | May provoke new arrhythmias or may worsen existing arrhythmias (from increased frequency of PVCs to ventricular fibrillation); may cause bronchospasm; may worsen CHF; may alter sensing and pacing thresholds of artificial pacemakers; agranulocytosis; may impair spermatogenesis; may exacerbate myasthenia gravis |
These agents decrease rate of sinus node and relax vascular smooth muscle, with concomitant reduction in peripheral vascular resistance (afterload). They may also exert a mild negative inotropic effect.
| Drug Name | Amiodarone (Cordarone) |
|---|---|
| Description | Prolongs duration of myocyte action potential, prolongs myocyte refractory period, and exerts alpha- and beta-adrenergic inhibition. Therapeutic serum level ranges from 0.5-2.5 mg/L. |
| Adult Dose | Loading dose: 800-1600 mg PO qd for 1-3 wk Maintenance dose: 600-800 mg PO qd for 1 mo, then 200-400 mg PO qd |
| Pediatric Dose | <1 year: 600-800 mg/1.73 m2/d PO divided q12-24h for 7-14 d, then 200-400 mg/1.73 m2/d >1 year: 10-15 mg/kg/d PO for 7-14 d, then 5 mg/kg/d PO qd or divided bid |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; complete AV block; intraventricular conduction defects; concurrent use of ritonavir or sparfloxacin |
| Interactions | Increases effect and blood levels of theophylline, quinidine, procainamide, phenytoin, methotrexate, flecainide, digoxin, cyclosporine, beta-blockers, and anticoagulants; cardiotoxicity is increased by ritonavir, sparfloxacin, and disopyramide; coadministration with calcium channel blockers may cause additive effect and decrease myocardial contractility further; cimetidine may increase levels |
| Pregnancy | D - Unsafe in pregnancy |
| Precautions | Long elimination half-life (40-55 d); asymptomatic corneal microdeposits leading to loss of vision from optic neuritis; alters liver enzymes; inhibits peripheral conversion of T4 to T3; may cause hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism; pulmonary fibrosis has been reported in adults; may worsen preexisting arrhythmias with bradycardia and AV block; may cause anorexia, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, paresthesias, ataxia, and tremor |
These agents are used to prevent clot formation secondary to blood stasis because of an enlarged (left) atrium and (left) atrial fibrillation.
| Drug Name | Warfarin (Coumadin) |
|---|---|
| Description | Inhibits vitamin K–dependent clotting factors II, VII, IX, and X and anticoagulant proteins C and S. Anticoagulation effect occurs 24 h after drug administration, but peak effect may happen 72-96 h later. Antidotes are vitamin K and FFP. |
| Adult Dose | 5-15 mg PO qd for 2-5 d, adjust to desired INR or PT; 2-10 mg/d PO qd maintenance |
| Pediatric Dose | 0.1 mg/kg/d PO qd, adjust to desired INR or PT; 0.05-0.34 mg/kg/d PO qd maintenance Adjust dose to maintain INR of 2.5-3.5 or PT of 1.5-2 times baseline |
| Contraindications | Documented hypersensitivity; severe liver or kidney disease; open wounds or GI ulcers; pregnancy (passes through the placental barrier and may cause fatal hemorrhage to fetus); malignant hypertension because of increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage; before invasive procedures (eg, spinal tap) |
| Interactions | Drugs that may decrease anticoagulant effects include griseofulvin, carbamazepine, glutethimide, estrogens, nafcillin, phenytoin, rifampin, barbiturates, cholestyramine, colestipol, vitamin K, spironolactone, PO contraceptives, and sucralfate Medications that may increase anticoagulant effects of warfarin include PO antibiotics, phenylbutazone, salicylates, sulfonamides, chloral hydrate, clofibrate, diazoxide, anabolic steroids, ketoconazole, ethacrynic acid, miconazole, nalidixic acid, sulfonylureas, allopurinol, chloramphenicol, cimetidine, disulfiram, metronidazole, phenylbutazone, phenytoin, propoxyphene, sulfonamides, gemfibrozil, acetaminophen, and sulindac |
| Pregnancy | X - Contraindicated in pregnancy |
| Precautions | Do not switch brands after achieving therapeutic response; caution in active tuberculosis or diabetes; patients with protein C or S deficiency are at risk of developing skin necrosis; requires periodic determinations of PT/INR |
| Media file 1: Hemodynamic changes in severe mitral valve stenosis (MS). MS causes an obstruction (in diastole) to blood flow from the left atrium (LA) to the left ventricle (LV). Increased LA pressures are transmitted retrograde to pulmonary veins and pulmonary capillaries, resulting in capillary leak with subsequent development of pulmonary edema. To overcome pulmonary edema, the arterioles constrict, increasing pulmonary pressures. With time, capillaries develop intimal thickening, causing fixed (permanent) pulmonary hypertension. The right ventricle (RV) hypertrophies to generate enough pressure to overcome the increased afterload. Eventually, the RV fails, which manifests as hepatomegaly and/or ascites, edema of the extremities, and cardiomegaly on radiograph. | |
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Mitral Stenosis, Acquired excerpt
Article Last Updated: Aug 23, 2006