1808 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
TABLE 237-2 Determinants of Stroke Volume
I. Ventricular Preload
A. Blood volume
B. Distribution of blood volume
1. Body position
2. Intrathoracic pressure
3. Intrapericardial pressure
4. Venous tone
5. Pumping action of skeletal muscles
C. Atrial contraction
II. Ventricular Afterload
A. Systemic vascular resistance
B. Elasticity of arterial tree
C. Arterial blood volume
D. Ventricular wall tension
1. Ventricular radius
2. Ventricular wall thickness
III. Myocardial Contractilitya
A. Intramyocardial [Ca2+] ↑↓
B. Cardiac adrenergic nerve activity ↑↓b
C. Circulating catecholamines ↑↓b
D. Cardiac rate ↑↓b
E. Exogenous inotropic agents ↑
F. Myocardial ischemia ↓
G. Myocardial cell death (necrosis, apoptosis, autophagy) ↓
H. Alterations of sarcomeric and cytoskeletal proteins ↓
1. Genetic
2. Hemodynamic overload
I. Myocardial fibrosis ↓
J. Chronic overexpression of neurohormones ↓
K. Ventricular remodeling ↓
L. Chronic and/or excessive myocardial hypertrophy ↓
a
Arrows indicate directional effects of determinants of contractility. b
Contractility
rises initially but later becomes depressed. Ventricular performance
Maximal activity
Walking
Rest
Normal-exercise
Normal-rest
Contractile state of myocardium
Exercise
Heart failure
Fatal myocardial
depression
Dyspnea Pulmonary edema
Ventricular EDV
Stretching of myocardium
2 C
A
D
B
1
3
3′
E
4
FIGURE 237-9 The interrelations among influences on ventricular end-diastolic
volume (EDV) through stretching of the myocardium and the contractile state of the
myocardium. Levels of ventricular EDV associated with filling pressures that result
in dyspnea and pulmonary edema are shown on the abscissa. Levels of ventricular
performance required when the subject is at rest, while walking, and during maximal
activity are designated on the ordinate. The broken lines are the descending limbs of
the ventricular-performance curves, which are rarely seen during life but show the
level of ventricular performance if end-diastolic volume could be elevated to very
high levels. For further explanation, see text. (Reproduced with permission from WS
Colucci and E Braunwald, in DP Zipes et al (eds): Pathophysiology of heart failure, in
Braunwald’s Heart Disease, 7th ed. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2005.)
Contractility Stroke volume
Afterload Heart rate
Preload
Higher
nervous
centers
Medullary
vasomotor
and cardiac
centers
Venous
return
Cardiac
output
Peripheral
resistance
Arterial
pressure
Carotid and
aortic
baroreceptors
FIGURE 237-10 Interactions in the intact circulation of preload, contractility,
and afterload in producing stroke volume. Stroke volume combined with heart
rate determines cardiac output, which, when combined with peripheral vascular
resistance, determines arterial pressure for tissue perfusion. The characteristics
of the arterial system also contribute to afterload, an increase that reduces
stroke volume. The interaction of these components with carotid and aortic arch
baroreceptors provides a feedback mechanism to higher medullary and vasomotor
cardiac centers and to higher levels in the central nervous system to affect a
modulating influence on heart rate, peripheral vascular resistance, venous return,
and contractility. (Reproduced with permission from MR Starling, in WS Colucci
and E Braunwald (eds): Physiology of myocardial contraction, in Atlas of Heart
Failure: Cardiac Function and Dysfunction, 3rd ed. Philadelphia, Current Medicine,
2002.)
other factors, such as adrenergic neuronal impulses increasing cardiac
contractility, heart rate, and venous tone, will serve as compensatory
mechanisms and sustain cardiac output in a normal individual. Ultimately, understanding the complex interactions between these different variables requires rigorous models to predict relevant outcomes,
and led to the early application of systems engineering principles in
medicine.
■ EXERCISE
The integrated response to exercise illustrates typical interactions among
the three determinants of stroke volume: preload, afterload, and contractility (Fig. 237-9). Hyperventilation, the pumping action of the exercising muscles, and venoconstriction during exercise all augment venous
return and hence ventricular filling and preload (Table 237-2). Simultaneously, the increase in neuronal and humoral adrenergic stimulation
of the myocardium and the tachycardia that occur during exercise
combine to augment the myocardial contractility (Fig. 237-9, curves
1 and 2), together elevating stroke volume and stroke work, with little
or no change in end-diastolic pressure and volume (Fig. 237-9, points
A and B). Vasodilation occurs in the exercising muscles, thus limiting
the increase in afterload that otherwise would occur as cardiac output
rises to levels as high as five times greater than basal levels during
maximal exercise. This vasodilation ultimately allows the achievement
of elevated cardiac outputs during exercise at arterial pressures only
moderately higher than the resting state.
ASSESSMENT OF CARDIAC FUNCTION
Several techniques can define impaired cardiac function in clinical
practice. Cardiac output and stroke volume may decline in the presence
of heart failure, but these variables are often within normal limits, especially at rest. A more sensitive index of cardiac function is the ejection
fraction, i.e., the ratio of stroke volume to end-diastolic volume (normal
value = 67 ± 8%), which is frequently depressed in systolic heart failure
even when stroke volume is normal. Alternatively, abnormally elevated
ventricular end-diastolic volume (normal value = 75 ± 20 mL/m2
) or
Basic Biology of the Cardiovascular System
1809CHAPTER 237
3
LV volume
ESPVR
afterload
LV pressure
1
2
preload
3
LV volume
LV pressure
1
2
Contractility
Contractility
Normal
contractility
FIGURE 237-11 The responses of the left ventricle (LV) to increased afterload, increased preload, and increased and reduced contractility are shown in the pressurevolume plane. Left. Effects of increases in preload and afterload on the pressure-volume loop. Because there has been no change in contractility, the end-systolic pressurevolume relationship (ESPVR) is unchanged. With an increase in afterload, stroke volume falls (1 → 2); with an increase in preload, stroke volume rises (1 → 3). Right. With
increased myocardial contractility and constant left ventricular end-diastolic volume, the ESPVR moves to the left of the normal line (lower end-systolic volume at any
end-systolic pressure) and stroke volume rises (1 → 3). With reduced myocardial contractility, the ESPVR moves to the right; end-systolic volume is increased, and stroke
volume falls (1 → 2).
end-systolic volume (normal value = 25 ± 7 mL/m2
) signifies left ventricular systolic impairment.
Noninvasive techniques, particularly echocardiography, radionuclide scintigraphy, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
(Chap. 241), have great value in the clinical assessment of myocardial
function. They provide measurements of end-diastolic and endsystolic volumes, ejection fraction, and systolic shortening rate, and
they allow assessment of ventricular filling (see below) as well as
regional contraction, relaxation, and tissue characterization. The latter
measurements have particular importance in ischemic heart disease, as
myocardial infarction causes regional myocardial damage.
Strong dependence on ventricular loading conditions influences the
precision of measurements of cardiac output, ejection fraction, and
ventricular volumes as indices of cardiac function. Thus, a depressed
ejection fraction and lowered cardiac output may occur in patients
with normal ventricular function but reduced preload, as occurs in
hypovolemia, or with increased afterload, as occurs in acutely elevated
arterial pressure.
The end-systolic left ventricular pressure-volume relationship has
particular value as an index of ventricular performance as it does
not depend on preload and afterload (Fig. 237-11). At any level of
myocardial contractility, left ventricular end-systolic volume varies
inversely with end-systolic pressure; as contractility declines, endsystolic volume (at any level of end-systolic pressure) rises. Invasive
measurement of end-systolic left ventricular pressure-volume loops
add rigor to research studies of left ventricular function, and integrated
cardiopulmonary exercise testing is now more broadly available, but
these techniques are less pragmatic than the more readily assessed indices obtained in routine clinical practice, such as ventricular volumes
and ejection fraction. Longitudinal measurements of some aspects of
cardiovascular physiology are increasingly feasible with implantable or
wearable devices.
■ DIASTOLIC FUNCTION
Ventricular filling is influenced by several characteristics of the myocardium, including (1) the extent and speed of myocardial relaxation
and (2) the passive stiffness of the ventricular wall. The former is
largely a function of the rate of uptake of Ca2+ by the SR that may be
enhanced by adrenergic activation and reduced by ischemia due to
limited ATP available for pumping Ca2+ into the SR (see above). For
the latter, ventricular stiffness increases with hypertrophy, fibrosis,
and conditions that infiltrate the ventricle, such as amyloid, or can
result from an extrinsic constraint (e.g., pericardial compression)
(Fig. 237-12).
Ventricular filling can be assessed by measuring flow velocity across
the mitral valve using Doppler ultrasound. Normally, inflow velocity is
more rapid in early diastole than during atrial systole. However, with
mild to moderately impaired relaxation, the rate of early diastolic filling
declines as presystolic filling rates rise. With further stiffening, flow is
“pseudo-normalized,” as early ventricular filling becomes more rapid
with rising left atrial pressure upstream of the left ventricle.
■ CARDIAC METABOLISM
The heart requires a continuous supply of energy (ATP) not only to
drive mechanical contraction but also to maintain ionic and biochemical homeostasis. The development of tension, the frequency of contraction, and myocardial contractility levels are the principal determinants
Abnormal relaxation Pericardial restraint
Chamber
dilation
Increased chamber
stiffness
Left ventricular volume
Left ventricular pressure
FIGURE 237-12 Mechanisms that cause diastolic dysfunction reflected in the
pressure-volume relation. The bottom half of the pressure-volume loop is depicted.
Solid lines represent normal subjects; broken lines represent patients with diastolic
dysfunction. (Reproduced with permission from JD Carroll et al: The differential
effects of positive inotropic and vasodilator therapy on diastolic properties in
patients with congestive cardiomyopathy. Circulation 74:815, 1986.)
1810 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
Mann D et al (eds): Braunwald’s Heart Disease: A Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicine, 10th ed. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2015.
Page E et al (eds): Handbook of Physiology: A Critical Comprehensive
Presentation of Physiological Knowledge and Concepts. Section 2:
The Cardiovascular System, Volume I: The Heart. New York, Oxford
University Press, 2002.
Spinale FG: Assessment of cardiac function—Basic principles and
approaches. Compr Physiol 5:1911, 2015.
Srivastava D: Making or breaking the heart: From lineage determination to morphogenesis. Cell 126:1037, 2006.
Taegtmeyer H et al: Cardiac metabolism in perspective. Comp
Physiol 6:1675, 2016.
of the heart’s energy and oxygen requirements, representing ~15% of
that of the entire organism.
The heart’s ATP production requires the generation of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) that can be derived from (in descending order)
free fatty acids (FFAs), glucose, lactate, amino acids, and ketone bodies.
Myocardial FFAs derive from circulating FFAs, whereas the cardiomyocyte’s glucose derives from plasma as well as from myocardial glycogen
stores (glycogenolysis). These two principal sources of acetyl-CoA are
metabolized distinctly in cardiac muscle. Glucose is converted in the
cytoplasm into pyruvate, which passes into mitochondria for conversion into acetyl-CoA that then undergoes oxidation. FFAs are converted
to acyl-CoA in the cytoplasm and acetyl-CoA in the mitochondria.
Acetyl-CoA enters the citric acid (Krebs) cycle to produce ATP by oxidative phosphorylation; ATP then enters the cytoplasm from the mitochondrial compartment. Intracellular adenosine diphosphate (ADP),
resulting from ATP breakdown, enhances ATP production.
In the fasted, resting state, circulating FFAs furnish most of the
heart’s acetyl-CoA (~70%). In the fed state, with elevations of blood
glucose and insulin, glucose oxidation increases and FFA oxidation
subsides. Increased cardiac work, inotropic agents, hypoxia, and mild
ischemia all enhance myocardial glucose uptake, production (glycogenolysis), and metabolism to pyruvate (glycolysis). Exercise raises
circulating lactate levels and myocardial utilization of acetyl-CoA.
By contrast, β-adrenergic stimulation, even from stress, raises the
circulating levels and metabolism of FFAs in favor of glucose. Severe
myocardial ischemia inhibits cytoplasmic pyruvate dehydrogenase,
producing incomplete glucose metabolism to lactic acid (anaerobic
glycolysis). Anaerobic glycolysis produces much less ATP than does
aerobic glucose metabolism. High concentrations of circulating FFAs,
which can occur when adrenergic stimulation is superimposed on
severe ischemia, reduce oxidative phosphorylation, and the myocardial content of ATP declines, impairing contraction. In addition, FFA
breakdown products may exert toxic or arrhythmogenic effects on
cardiac cell membranes.
Myocardial energy is stored as creatine phosphate (CP), which
is in equilibrium with ATP, the immediate energy source. In states
of reduced energy availability, the CP stores decline first. Cardiac
hypertrophy, fibrosis, tachycardia, increased wall tension due to ventricular dilation, and increased intracytoplasmic [Ca2+] all contribute
to increased myocardial energy needs. When coupled with reduced
coronary flow reserve, as occurs with obstruction of coronary arteries
or abnormalities of the coronary microcirculation, an imbalance in
myocardial ATP production relative to demand may occur, and the
resulting ischemia can worsen or cause heart failure.
■ REGENERATING CARDIAC TISSUE
Adult mammalian myocardial cells are fully differentiated and have
little or no regenerative potential; however, there is evidence that the
immature mammalian heart has some limited regenerative potential
that rapidly becomes constrained with increasing maturity and workload. Considerable current effort is being devoted to evaluating the
utility of various approaches to facilitate the transient release of these
constraints to enhance cardiac repair after injury. The success of such
approaches would offer the exciting possibility of reconstructing an
infarcted or failing ventricle (Chap. 484).
Acknowledgment
The authors wish to thank Peter Libby for his contribution to the prior
version of this chapter.
■ FURTHER READING
Bautch VL, Caron KM: Blood and lymphatic vessel formation. Cold
Spring Harb Perspect Biol 7(3):a008268, 2015.
Dejana E et al: The molecular basis of endothelial cell plasticity. Nat
Commun 8:14361, 2017.
Green DJ et al: Vascular adaptation to exercise in humans: Role of
hemodynamic stimuli. Physiol Rev 97:495, 2017.
MacLeod KT: Recent advances in understanding cardiac contractility
in health and disease. F1000Res 5(F1000 Faculty Rev):1770, 2016.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is now the most common cause of death
worldwide. Before 1900, infectious diseases and malnutrition were the
most common causes, and CVD was responsible for <10% of all deaths.
In 2017, CVD accounted for 17.8 million deaths worldwide (32%), with
the same rate now occurring in both high-income countries and lowand middle-income countries.
THE EPIDEMIOLOGIC TRANSITION
The global rise in CVD is the result of an unprecedented transformation in the causes of morbidity and mortality during the twentieth
century. Known as the epidemiologic transition, this shift is driven
by industrialization, urbanization, and associated lifestyle and demographic changes and is taking place in every part of the world among
all races, ethnic groups, and cultures. The transition is divided into four
basic stages: pestilence and famine, receding pandemics, degenerative
and man-made diseases, and delayed degenerative diseases. A fifth
stage, characterized by an epidemic of inactivity and obesity, is emerging in some countries (Table 238-1).
The age of pestilence and famine is marked by malnutrition, infectious diseases, and high infant and child mortality that are offset by
high fertility. Tuberculosis, dysentery, cholera, and influenza are often
fatal, resulting in a mean life expectancy of about 30 years. CVD, which
accounts for <10% of deaths, takes the form of rheumatic heart disease
and cardiomyopathies due to infection and malnutrition. Approximately 10% of the world’s population remains in the age of pestilence
and famine.
Per capita income and life expectancy increase during the age of
receding pandemics as the emergence of public health systems, cleaner
water supplies, and improved nutrition combine to drive down deaths
from infectious disease and malnutrition. Infant and childhood mortality also decline, but deaths due to CVD increase to between 10% and
35% of all deaths. Rheumatic valvular disease, hypertension, coronary
heart disease (CHD), and stroke are the predominant forms of CVD.
Almost 40% of the world’s population is currently in this stage.
The age of degenerative and man-made diseases is distinguished
by mortality from noncommunicable diseases—primarily CVD—
surpassing mortality from malnutrition and infectious diseases.
Caloric intake, particularly from animal fat, increases. CHD and stroke
are prevalent, and between 35% and 65% of all deaths can be traced
to CVD. Typically, the rate of CHD deaths exceeds that of stroke by a
ratio of 2:1 to 3:1. During this period, average life expectancy surpasses
the age of 50. Roughly 35% of the world’s population falls into this
category.
238 Epidemiology of
Cardiovascular Disease
Thomas A. Gaziano, J. Michael Gaziano
Epidemiology of Cardiovascular Disease
1811CHAPTER 238
Currently, the United States is entering what appears to be a fifth
phase. The decline in the age-adjusted CVD death rate of 3% per year
through the 1970s and 1980s has tapered off in the 1990s to 2%. However, CVD death rates have declined by 3–5% per year during the first
decade of the new millennium. Competing trends appear to be at play.
On the one hand, an increase in the prevalence of diabetes and obesity,
a slowing in the rate of decline in smoking, and a leveling off in the rate
of detection and treatment for hypertension are in the negative column.
On the other hand, cholesterol levels continue to decline in the face of
increased statin use.
Many high-income countries (HICs)—which together account for
15% of the population—have proceeded through four stages of the epidemiologic transition in roughly the same pattern as the United States.
CHD is the dominant form of CVD in these countries, with rates that
tend to be two- to fivefold higher than stroke rates. However, variations
exist. Whereas North America, Australia, and central northwestern
European HICs experienced significant increases then rapid declines
in CVD rates, southern and central European countries experienced a
more gradual rise and fall in rates. More specifically, central European
countries (i.e., Austria, Belgium, and Germany) declined at slower
rates compared to their northern counterparts (i.e., Finland, Sweden,
Denmark, and Norway). Countries such as Portugal, Spain, and Japan
never reached the high mortality rates that the United States and other
countries did, with CHD mortality rates at 200 per 100,000, or less. The
countries of Western Europe also exhibit a clear north/south gradient
in absolute rates of CVD, with rates highest in northern countries (i.e.,
Finland, Ireland, and Scotland) and lowest in Mediterranean countries
(i.e., France, Spain, and Italy). Japan is unique among the HICs, most
likely due to the unique dietary patterns of its population. Although
stroke rates increased dramatically, CHD rates did not rise as sharply
in Japan. However, Japanese dietary habits are undergoing substantial
changes, reflected in an increase in cholesterol levels.
Patterns in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs; gross
national income per capita $11,666) depend, in part, on cultural
differences, secular trends, and responses at the country level, with
regard to both public health and treatment infrastructure. Although
communicable diseases continue to be a major cause of death, CVD
has emerged as a significant health concern in LMICs. With 85% of the
world’s population, LMICs are driving the rates of change in the global
burden of CVD (Fig. 238-1). In most LMICs, an urban/rural gradient
has emerged for CHD, stroke, and hypertension, with higher rates in
urban centers.
However, although CVD rates are rapidly rising globally, vast differences exist among the regions and countries, and even within the
TABLE 238-1 Five Stages of the Epidemiologic Transition
STAGE DESCRIPTION
DEATHS RELATED
TO CVD, % PREDOMINANT CVD TYPE
Pestilence and famine Predominance of malnutrition and infectious diseases as causes of death;
high rates of infant and child mortality; low mean life expectancy
<10 Rheumatic heart disease, cardiomyopathies
caused by infection and malnutrition
Receding pandemics Improvements in nutrition and public health lead to decrease in rates of
deaths related to malnutrition and infection; precipitous decline in infant
and child mortality rates
10–35 Rheumatic valvular disease, hypertension,
CHD, and stroke (predominantly
hemorrhagic)
Degenerative and manmade diseases
Increased fat and caloric intake and decrease in physical activity lead
to emergence of hypertension and atherosclerosis; with increase in life
expectancy, mortality from chronic, noncommunicable diseases exceeds
mortality from malnutrition and infectious disease
35–65 CHD and stroke (ischemic and hemorrhagic)
Delayed degenerative
diseases
CVD and cancer are the major causes of morbidity and mortality; better
treatment and prevention efforts help avoid deaths among those with
disease and delay primary events; age-adjusted CVD morality declines;
CVD affecting older and older individuals
40–50 CHD, stroke, and congestive heart failure
Inactivity and obesity Overweight and obesity increase at alarming rate; diabetes and
hypertension increase; decline in smoking rates levels off; a minority of
the population meets physical activity recommendations
38 CHD, stroke, and congestive heart failure,
peripheral vascular disease
Abbreviations: CHD, coronary heart disease; CVD, cardiovascular disease.
Source: Data from AR Omran: The epidemiologic transition: A theory of the epidemiology of population change. Milbank Mem Fund Q 49:509, 1971; and SJ Olshansky,
AB Ault: The fourth stage of the epidemiologic transition: The age of delayed degenerative diseases. Milbank Q 64:355, 1986.
In the age of delayed degenerative diseases, CVD and cancer remain
the major causes of morbidity and mortality, with CVD accounting
for 40% of all deaths. However, age-adjusted CVD mortality declines,
aided by preventive strategies (for example, smoking cessation programs and effective blood pressure control), acute hospital management, and technologic advances, such as the availability of bypass
surgery. CHD, stroke, and congestive heart failure are the primary
forms of CVD. About 15% of the world’s population is now in the age
of delayed degenerative diseases or is exiting this age and moving into
the fifth stage of the epidemiologic transition.
In the industrialized world, physical activity continues to decline
while total caloric intake increases. The resulting epidemic of overweight and obesity may signal the start of the age of inactivity and
obesity. Rates of type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and lipid abnormalities are on the rise, trends that are particularly evident in children.
If these risk factor trends continue, age-adjusted CVD mortality rates
that have fallen for decades during the fourth phase could increase in
the coming years as suggested by recent data.
■ PATTERNS IN THE EPIDEMIOLOGIC TRANSITION
Unique regional features have modified aspects of the transition
in various parts of the world. High-income countries experienced
declines in CVD death rates by as much as 50–60% over the past
60 years, whereas CVD death rates increased by 15% over the past
20 years in the low- and middle-income range and the rate of change
has been faster. However, given the large amount of available data,
the United States serves as a useful reference point for comparisons.
The age of pestilence and famine occurred before 1900, with a largely
agrarian economy and population. Infectious diseases accounted for
more deaths than any other cause. By the 1930s, the country proceeded through the age of receding pandemics. The establishment of
public health infrastructures resulted in dramatic declines in infectious
disease mortality rates. Lifestyle changes due to rapid urbanization
resulted in a simultaneous increase in CVD mortality rates, reaching
~390 per 100,000. Between 1930 and 1965, the country entered the age
of degenerative and man-made diseases. Infectious disease mortality
rates fell to fewer than 50 per 100,000 per year, whereas CVD mortality
rates reached peak levels with increasing urbanization and lifestyle
changes in diet, physical activity, and tobacco consumption. The age of
delayed degenerative diseases took place between 1965 and 2000. New
therapeutic approaches, preventive measures, and exposure to public
health campaigns promoting lifestyle modifications led to substantial
declines in age-adjusted mortality rates and a steadily rising age at
which a first CVD event occurs.
1812 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
countries themselves (Fig. 238-2). The East Asia and Pacific regions
appear to be straddling the second and third phases of the epidemiologic transition. CVD is a major cause of death in China, but like Japan,
stroke causes more deaths than CHD in a ratio of about three to one.
Vietnam and Cambodia, on the other hand, are just emerging from the
pestilence and famine transition. The Middle East and North Africa
regions also appear to be entering the third phase of the epidemiologic
transition, with increasing life expectancy and CVD death rates just
below those of HICs. In general, Latin America appears to be in the
third phase of the transition, although there is vast regional heterogeneity with some areas in the second phase of the transition and some
in the fourth. The Eastern Europe and Central Asia regions, however,
are firmly in the peak of the third phase, with the highest death rates
due to CVD (~66%) in the world. Importantly, deaths due to CHD are
not limited to the elderly in this region and have a significant effect on
working-age populations. South Asia—and more specifically, India,
which accounts for the greatest proportion of the region’s population—
is experiencing an alarming increase in heart disease. The transition
appears to be in the Western style, with CHD as the dominant form
of CVD. However, rheumatic heart disease continues to be a major
cause of morbidity and mortality. As in South Asia, rheumatic heart
disease is also an important cause of CVD morbidity and mortality
in sub-Saharan Africa, which largely remains in the first phase of the
epidemiologic transition.
Many factors contribute to this heterogeneity among LMICs. First,
the regions are in various stages of the epidemiologic transition.
Second, vast differences in lifestyle and behavioral risk factors exist.
Third, racial and ethnic differences may lead to altered susceptibilities to various forms of CVD. In addition, it should be noted that for
most countries in these regions, accurate country-wide data on causespecific mortality are not complete.
■ GLOBAL TRENDS IN CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE
Over the past 5 years, there have been changes in the trends of CVD
that are reflective of both trends in demographics and management of
disease, but also of the way deaths and diseases have been measured and
estimated. In 2017, the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study updated
its estimates with several important changes based on newly available
data, refinement in the causes of death, and the introduction of new
modeling techniques. The major changes include the addition of an
independent estimation of population and fertility, the addition of over
127 country-years of vital registration and verbal autopsy data, revisions
of some deaths from “misclassified” to dementia, Parkinson’s disease
and atrial fibrillation, and the addition of new diseases such as nonrheumatic calcific aortic and degenerative mitral valve disease. CVD
accounts for 32% of deaths worldwide, a number expected to increase.
In 2017, CHD accounted for 16.0% of all deaths globally and the largest
Highincome
countries
Low- and middleincome
countries
CVD
31.8%
INJ
8.0%
CMNN
18.6%
ONC
41.6%
CVD ONC CMNN INJ
Global deaths by cause, 2017
FIGURE 238-1 Global deaths by cause, 2017. CMNN, communicable, maternal,
neonatal, and nutritional disorders; CVD, cardiovascular diseases; INJ, injuries;
ONC, other noncommunicable diseases. (Based on data from Global Burden of
Disease Study 2017. Global Burden of Disease Study 2017 [GBD 2017] Results.
Seattle, United States: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation [IHME], 2020.)
Latin America and the Caribbean
27.4%
(582 million)
High-income
31.8%
(1075 million)
South Asia
27.3%
(1783 million)
Sub-Saharan Africa
12.3%
(1026 million)
Southeast and East Asia and Pacific
37.3%
(2159 million)
Middle East and North Africa
41.6%
(600 million)
Europe and Central Asia
43.7%
(416 million)
FIGURE 238-2 Cardiovascular disease deaths as a percentage of total deaths and total population in seven economic regions of the world defined by the World Bank.
(Based on data from Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. Global Burden of Disease Study 2017 [GBD 2017] Results. Seattle, United States: Institute for Health Metrics and
Evaluation [IHME], 2020.)
Epidemiology of Cardiovascular Disease
1813CHAPTER 238
CVD deaths per 100,000
1990 1995 2000 2005
Year
2010 2015 2017
500
450
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
World bank high income
World bank low income
World bank lower middle income
World bank upper middle income
Global
FIGURE 238-3 Age-standardized cardiovascular diseases (CVD) death rate per
100,000 from 1990 to 2017, by World Bank income. (Based on data from Global
Burden of Disease Study 2017. Global Burden of Disease Study 2017 [GBD 2017]
Results. Seattle, United States: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation [IHME],
2020.)
Number of CVD Deaths in Millions
1990 1995 2000 2005
Year
2010 2015 2017
20
18
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
World bank high income
World bank low income
World bank lower middle income
World bank upper middle income
Global
FIGURE 238-4 Number of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) deaths from 1990 to 2017,
by World Bank income. (Based on data from Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.
Global Burden of Disease Study 2017 [GBD 2017] Results. Seattle, United States:
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation [IHME], 2020.)
portion (10%) of global years of life lost (YLLs) and disability-adjusted
life-years (DALYs) (7%). Stroke moved from the third to the second
largest cause of death (11.0% of all deaths) and remained the third largest contributor to global YLLs (7%) and DALYs (5%). Together, CHD
and stroke accounted for more than a quarter of all deaths worldwide.
The burden of stroke is of growing concern among LMICs. The impact
of stroke on DALYs and mortality rates is more than three times greater
in LMICs as compared to HICs.
With 85% of the world’s population, LMICs largely drive global
CVD rates and trends. More than 14 million (14.4) CVD deaths
occurred in LMICs in 2017, compared to 3.3 million in HICs. Globally, there is evidence of significant delays in age of occurrence and/
or improvements in case fatality rates; between 1990 and 2017, the
number of CVD deaths increased by 49%, but age-adjusted death rates
decreased by 30.4% in the same period. Age-standardized death rates,
however, have declined faster in HICs than in middle-income and
lower-income regions (Fig. 238-3). Population growth has been greater
in LMICs compared to HICs. As a result of slower rates of population
growth in HICs, overall CVD deaths remained steady. However, in the
LMICs, the population aging and growth outstripped gains in ageadjusted mortality reductions such that overall CVD deaths continued
to climb over the past 25 years (Fig. 238-4).
Although HIC population growth will be fueled by immigration
from LMICs, the populations of HICs will shrink as a proportion of the
world’s population. The modest decline in CVD death rates that began
in the HICs in the latter third of the twentieth century will continue,
but the rate of decline appears to be slowing. However, these countries
are expected to see an increase in the prevalence of CVD, as well as the
absolute number of deaths as the population ages.
Significant portions of the population living in LMICs have entered
the third phase of the epidemiologic transition, and some are entering
the fourth stage. Changing demographics play a significant role in
future predictions for CVD throughout the world. For example, the
population growth rate in Eastern Europe and Central Asia was 1.1%
between 2010 and 2017, whereas it was 11% in South Asia. CVD rates
will also have an economic impact. Even assuming no increase in CVD
risk factors, most countries, but especially India and South Africa,
will see a large number of people between 35 and 64 die of CVD over
the next 30 years, as well as an increasing level of morbidity among
middle-aged people related to heart disease and stroke.
■ RISK FACTORS
Global variation in CVD rates is related to temporal and regional
variations in known risk factors and behaviors. Ecologic analyses of
major CVD risk factors and mortality demonstrate high correlations
between expected and observed mortality rates for the three main risk
factors—smoking, serum cholesterol, and hypertension—and suggest
that many regional variations are based on differences in conventional
risk factors.
Behavioral Risk Factors • TOBACCO Over 1.4 billion people
use tobacco worldwide. Tobacco use currently causes about 7.1 million
deaths annually (12.7% of all deaths), 2.6 million of which are CVDrelated. The population of the high-income country group smokes
(21.6%) at almost double the rate of the low-income countries (11.2%),
whereas the middle-income country group’s smoking rate (19.5%)
approximates the global average (19.2%). From 2007 to 2017, smoking
rates decreased across low-, middle-, and high-income country groups,
with relative reductions of 19%, 12%, and 20%, respectively. By 2030,
the global average smoking rate is expected to decline from 19% to
16% (women, 4%; men, 28%); however, the number of tobacco users
is expected to rise owing to population growth. Secondhand smoke is
another well-established cause of CVD, responsible for 575,000 deaths of
nonsmokers in 2017. Although smoking bans have both immediate and
long-term benefits, implementation varies greatly between countries.
DIET Total caloric intake per capita increases as countries develop.
With regard to CVD, a key element of dietary change is an increase in
intake of saturated animal fats and hydrogenated vegetable fats, which
contain atherogenic trans fatty acids, along with a decrease in intake of
plant-based foods and an increase in simple carbohydrates. Fat contributes <20% of calories in rural China and India, <30% in Japan, and well
above 30% in the United States. Caloric contributions from fat appear
to be falling in the HICs.
PHYSICAL INACTIVITY The increased mechanization that accompanies the economic transition leads to a shift from physically demanding,
agriculture-based work to largely sedentary industry- and office-based
work. Physical inactivity is responsible for 1.3 million global deaths
annually. The global prevalence of physical inactivity has remained
steady between 2001 and 2016 (28.5% to 27.5%). In the United States,
approximately one-quarter of the adult population does not participate
1814 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
in any leisure-time physical activity, and only 24.3% of adults reported
participating in adequate leisure-time aerobic and muscle-strengthening
activity to meet federal guidelines. Physical inactivity is similarly high
in other regions of the world and is increasing in countries that are
rapidly urbanizing as part of their economic transition. Mortality rates
attributable to inactivity are highest in North Africa and the Middle
East and in Central and Eastern Europe. In urban China, for example,
the proportion of adults who participate in moderate- or high-level
activity has decreased significantly, whereas the proportion of those
who participate in low-level activity has increased.
■ METABOLIC RISK FACTORS
Examination of trends in metabolic risk factors provides insight into
changes in the CVD burden globally. Here we describe four metabolic
risk factors—lipid levels, hypertension, obesity, and diabetes mellitus—
using data from the Global Burden of Disease, Injuries, and Risk
Factors Study (GBD 2017). The GBD project identified and compiled
mortality and morbidity data from 195 countries from 1980 to 2017.
Lipid Levels Worldwide, high cholesterol levels are estimated to
play a role in 42% of ischemic heart disease deaths and 9% of stroke
deaths, amounting to 4.3 million deaths annually. Although mean
population plasma cholesterol levels tend to rise as countries move
through the epidemiologic transition, mean serum total cholesterol
levels have decreased globally between 1980 and 2008 by 0.08 mmol/L
per decade in men and 0.07 mmol/L per decade in women. Large
declines occurred in Australasia, North America, and Western Europe
(0.19–0.21 mmol/L). Countries in the East Asia and Pacific region
experienced increases of >0.08 mmol/L in both men and women.
More recent research including Mendelian studies suggests that lipoprotein(a) may act as an individual predictor of CVD risk beyond traditional total or low-density lipoprotein cholesterol through increased
cellular lipid accumulation, endothelial dysfunction, and impacts on
coagulation. It appears to be elevated in ~20% of the global population, although fewer data are available from LMICs. Nonrandomized
data suggest higher rates among those of African descent with twice
the levels of Caucasians, with East Asians and South Asians having
intermediate levels. There are limited data on clinical agents that target
lipoprotein(a), although PCSK9 inhibitors lower it or other specific
targets, so this remains an area of intense research.
Hypertension Elevated blood pressure is an early indicator of the
epidemiologic transition. Observational studies show increased risk of
CVD beginning with systolic blood pressures (SBPs) >110–115 mmHg.
Between 1990 and 2015, the global prevalence of SBP ≥110–115 mmHg
increased from 73,119 to 81,373 per 100,000, whereas the prevalence
of SBP ≥140 mmHg rose from 17,307 to 20,526 per 100,000. In 2015,
of the estimated 3.47 billion adults with SBP ≥110–115 mmHg, 874
million (25%) had SBP ≥140 mmHg. While SBP ≥140 mmHg accounts
for only 25% of those with elevated blood pressure, it accounted for
73% (7.8 million) of deaths due to SBP of ≥110–115 mmHg in 2015.
Worldwide, 55% of stroke deaths (3.36 of 6.17 million) and 55% of
CHD deaths (4.89 of 8.93 million) are attributable to high blood pressure, accounting for 8.25 million deaths in 2017. From 1990 to 2015,
the number of deaths related to SBP ≥140 mmHg increased in all LMIC
groups but fell in HICs. Between 1980 and 2008, the age-standardized
prevalence of uncontrolled hypertension decreased even as the number
of people with uncontrolled hypertension increased due to population
growth and aging. Rising mean population blood pressure also occurs
as populations industrialize and move from rural to urban settings. For
example, the prevalence of hypertension in urban India is 33.8%, but
varies between 14.5 and 31.7% in rural regions. One major concern in
LMICs is the high rate of undetected, and therefore untreated, hypertension. This may explain, at least in part, the higher stroke rates in
these countries in relation to CHD rates during the early stages of the
transition. The high rates of hypertension throughout Asia, especially
undiagnosed hypertension, likely contribute to the high prevalence of
hemorrhagic stroke in the region. Globally, however, mean SBP has
decreased for both sexes (0.8 mmHg per decade for men; 1.0 mmHg
per decade for women).
Obesity In 2015, an estimated 603.4 million adults and 107.7 million
children were obese. Global obesity prevalence was 12.0% among
adults (5.0% among children) and is increasing throughout the world,
particularly in developing countries where the trajectories are steeper
than those experienced by the developed countries. High body mass
index (BMI) contributed to 4.0 million deaths worldwide (7.1% deaths
from any cause); CVD was the leading cause of these deaths (2.7 million)
and also of associated DALYs (66.3 of 120 million) followed by diabetes
(0.6 million deaths, 30.4 million DALYs). Women are more affected by
obesity than men; from 1975 to 2014, global mean age-standardized
BMI increased from 22.1 to 24.4 kg/m2
in females and from 21.7 to 24.2
kg/m2
in males, whereas the prevalence of obesity increased from 6.4%
to 14.9% in females and 3.2% to 10.8% in males. The proportion of
the world’s adult women who are either overweight or obese rose from
29.8% to 38.0% between 1980 and 2013, while an increase from 28.8%
to 36.9% was observed for men. Country and regional differences
are observed. The highest prevalence of male obesity is in the United
States, Southern and Central Latin America, Australasia, and Central
and Western Europe. For females, the highest prevalence of obesity is
in Southern and North Africa, the Middle East, Central and Southern
Latin America, and the United States. The lowest prevalence for both
males and females was observed in South and Southeast Asia and in
East, Central, and West Africa. Generally, the prevalence of obesity
for both sexes increased with the increase in sociodemographic index;
however, the rise in adult obesity in developed countries has slowed
since 2006. In many of the LMICs, obesity appears to coexist with
undernutrition and malnutrition. Adolescents are at particular risk.
Diabetes Mellitus As a consequence of, or in addition to, increasing BMI and decreasing levels of physical activity, worldwide rates of
diabetes—predominantly type 2 diabetes—are on the rise. According
to the most recent data from the GBD project, the prevalence of diabetes increased 129.7% for males and 120.9% for females between 1990
and 2017. An estimated 476 million people worldwide have diabetes,
and the International Diabetes Foundation predicts this number will
reach 693 million by 2045. Nearly 50% of people with diabetes are
undiagnosed, and 80% live in LMICs. The Middle East and North
Africa have the highest regional age-standardized prevalence (8.7%
of the population) and incidence rates (400 per 100,000) of diabetes, whereas East Asia and the Pacific has the lowest (5.8%; 249 per
100,000). Future growth will also largely occur in the Middle East and
Africa, along with other LMICs in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
■ GENETIC RISK FACTORS
A great deal of effort has recently been invested in understanding how
genes affect cardiovascular health in populations. These efforts have
focused on germline genetic variants that are related to specific CVDs as
well as those that are associated with cardiovascular risk factors. In both
cases, every year, the number of associated variants has increased meaningfully to the point that it appears that hundreds or even thousands of
variants are associated with these conditions, each explaining a small
amount of the population variability in disease and risk factors. Collections of variants have been combined in polygenomic risk scores, but
these too explain only a small amount of the variability of the disease
in the population. Much more data will emerge in the coming years
about these associations, the mechanisms that explain these associations, the relationships of variants that are specific to certain tissues
such as the heart or the brain, and the interactions between genetic
and lifestyle factors in causing disease. Currently, most of the data are
among those with European ancestry; however, large-scale efforts are
underway to understand the relationships between genes and diseases
and their risk factors around the world. The early data suggest nontrivial differences among various world populations. Beyond germline
risk, there appears to be increased cardiovascular risk associated with
age-related expansion of hematopoietic clones with somatic mutations,
including loss-of-function alleles of certain genes. Individuals with
these mutations without other hematologic abnormalities are defined
as having clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP).
Physical Examination of the Cardiovascular System
1815CHAPTER 239
Recent studies suggest those with CHIP have up to a twofold increased
risk of developing CHD.
SUMMARY
Although CVD rates are declining in the HICs, they are increasing in
many other regions of the world. The consequences of this preventable
epidemic will be substantial on many levels, including individual mortality and morbidity, family suffering, and staggering economic costs.
Three complementary strategies can be used to lessen the impact.
First, the overall burden of CVD risk factors can be lowered through
population-wide public health measures, such as national campaigns
against cigarette smoking, unhealthy diets, and physical inactivity. Second,
it is important to identify higher risk subgroups of the population who
stand to benefit the most from specific, low-cost prevention interventions, including screening for and treatment of hypertension and elevated
cholesterol. Simple, low-cost interventions, such as the “polypill”—a
regimen of aspirin, a statin, and an antihypertensive agent—also need
to be explored. Third, resources should be allocated to acute, as well
as secondary, prevention interventions. For countries with limited
resources, a critical first step in developing a comprehensive plan is
better assessment of cause-specific mortality and morbidity, as well as
the prevalence, of the major preventable risk factors.
In the meantime, the HICs must continue to bear the burden of
research and development aimed at prevention and treatment, being
mindful of the economic limitations of many countries. The concept
of the epidemiologic transition provides insight into how to alter the
course of the CVD epidemic. The efficient transfer of low-cost preventive and therapeutic strategies could alter the natural course of this
epidemic and thereby reduce the excess global burden of preventable
CVD.
■ FURTHER READING
Gaziano T, Gaziano JM: Global burden of cardiovascular disease,
in Heart Disease: A Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicine, 11th ed,
E Braunwald (ed). Philadelphia, Elsevier/Saunders, 2018.
Jaiswal S et al: Clonal hematopoiesis and risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. N Engl J Med 377:111 2017.
Murray C et al: Population and fertility by age and sex for 195 countries and territories, 1950-2017: A systematic analysis for the Global
Burden of Disease Study 2017. Lancet 392:1995, 2018.
Roth G et al: Global, regional, and national age-sex-specific mortality
for 282 causes of death in 195 countries and territories, 1980-2017:
A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.
Lancet 392:1736, 2018.
Virani S et al: Heart disease and stroke statistics – 2020 update: A
report from the American Heart Association. Circulation 141:e139,
2020.
Section 2 Diagnosis of Cardiovascular Disorders
239 Physical Examination
of the Cardiovascular
System
Patrick T. O’Gara, Joseph Loscalzo
The approach to a patient with known or suspected cardiovascular
disease begins with the time-honored traditions of a directed history
and a targeted physical examination. The scope of these activities
depends on the clinical context at the time of presentation, ranging
from an elective ambulatory follow-up visit to a more urgent emergency department encounter. There has been a gradual decline in
physical examination skills over the past few decades at every level, from
student to faculty specialist, a development of great concern to both
clinicians and medical educators. Classic cardiac findings are recognized by only a minority of internal medicine and family practice
residents. Despite popular perceptions, clinical performance does not
improve predictably as a function of experience; instead, the acquisition of new examination skills may become more difficult for a busy
individual practitioner. Less time is now devoted to mentored cardiovascular examinations during the training of students and residents.
One widely recognized outcome of these trends is the progressive overutilization of noninvasive imaging studies to establish the presence and
severity of cardiovascular disease even when the examination findings
imply a low pretest probability of significant pathology. Proponents of
the use of hand-held ultrasound devices to identify and characterize
structural cardiac disease have called for its incorporation into educational curricula. Techniques to improve bedside examination skills
include repetition, patient-centered teaching conferences, visual display feedback of auscultatory events using Doppler echocardiographic
imaging, and simulation-based training.
The evidence base that links the findings from the history and
physical examination to the presence, severity, and prognosis of cardiovascular disease has been established most rigorously for coronary
artery disease, heart failure, and valvular heart disease. For example,
observations regarding heart rate, blood pressure, signs of pulmonary
congestion, and the presence of mitral regurgitation (MR) contribute
importantly to bedside risk assessment in patients with acute coronary
syndromes. Observations from the physical examination in this setting can inform clinical decision-making before the results of cardiac
biomarker testing are known. The prognosis of patients with systolic
heart failure can be predicted on the basis of the jugular venous pressure (JVP) and the presence or absence of a third heart sound (S3
).
Accurate characterization of cardiac murmurs provides important
insight into the natural history of many valvular and congenital heart
lesions. Finally, the important role played by the physical examination
in enhancing the clinician-patient relationship cannot be overstated.
■ THE GENERAL PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Any examination begins with an assessment of the general appearance
of the patient, with notation of age, posture, demeanor, and overall
health status. Is the patient in pain or resting quietly, dyspneic or
diaphoretic? Does the patient choose to avoid certain body positions
to reduce or eliminate pain, as might be the case with suspected
acute pericarditis? Are there clues indicating that dyspnea may have a
pulmonary cause, such as a barrel chest deformity with an increased
anterior-posterior diameter, tachypnea, and pursed-lip breathing? Skin
pallor, cyanosis, and jaundice can be appreciated readily and provide
additional clues. The appearance of a chronically ill-appearing emaciated patient may suggest the presence of long-standing heart failure
or another systemic disorder, such as a malignancy. Various genetic
syndromes, often with cardiovascular involvement, can also be recognized easily, such as trisomy 21, Marfan syndrome, and Holt-Oram
syndrome. Height and weight should be measured routinely, and both
body mass index and body surface area should be calculated. Knowledge of the waist circumference and the waist-to-hip ratio can be used
to predict long-term cardiovascular risk. Mental status, level of alertness, and mood should be assessed continuously during the interview
and examination.
Skin Central cyanosis occurs with significant right-to-left shunting at the level of the heart or lungs, allowing deoxygenated blood to
reach the systemic circulation. Peripheral cyanosis or acrocyanosis,
in contrast, is usually related to reduced extremity blood flow due to
small vessel constriction, as seen in patients with severe heart failure,
shock, or peripheral vascular disease; it can be aggravated by the use
of β-adrenergic blockers with unopposed α-mediated vasoconstriction.
Differential cyanosis refers to isolated cyanosis affecting the lower
but not the upper extremities in a patient with a large patent ductus
arteriosus (PDA) and secondary pulmonary hypertension with rightto-left to shunting at the great vessel level. Telangiectasias on the lips,
1816 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
tongue, and mucous membranes, as part of the Osler-Weber-Rendu
syndrome (hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia), resemble spider
nevi and can be a source of right-to-left shunting when also present in the lung. Malar telangiectasias also are seen in patients with
advanced mitral stenosis (MS) or scleroderma. An unusually tan or
bronze discoloration of the skin may suggest hemochromatosis as the
cause of the associated systolic heart failure. Jaundice, which may be
visible first in the sclerae, has a broad differential diagnosis but, in
the appropriate setting, can be consistent with advanced right heart
failure and congestive hepatomegaly. Various hereditary lipid disorders
sometimes are associated with subcutaneous xanthomas, particularly
along the tendon sheaths or over the extensor surfaces of the extremities.
Severe hypertriglyceridemia can be associated with eruptive xanthomatosis and lipemia retinalis. Palmar crease xanthomas are specific for
type III hyperlipoproteinemia. Pseudoxanthoma elasticum, a disease
associated with premature atherosclerosis, is manifested by a leathery,
cobblestoned appearance of the skin in the axilla and neck creases and
by angioid streaks on funduscopic examination. Extensive lentiginoses
have been described in a variety of development delay–cardiovascular
syndromes, including Carney’s syndrome, which includes multiple
atrial myxomas. Cutaneous manifestations of sarcoidosis such as lupus
pernio and erythema nodosum may suggest this disease as a cause
of an associated dilated cardiomyopathy, especially with heart block,
intraventricular conduction delay, or ventricular tachycardia.
Head and Neck Dentition and oral hygiene should be assessed in
every patient both as a source of potential infection and as an index of
general health. A high-arched palate is a feature of Marfan syndrome
and other connective tissue disease syndromes. Bifid uvula has been
described in patients with Loeys-Dietz syndrome, and orange tonsils
are characteristic of Tangier disease. The ocular manifestations of
hyperthyroidism have been well described. Many patients with congenital heart disease have associated hypertelorism, low-set ears, or
micrognathia. Blue sclerae are a feature of osteogenesis imperfecta.
An arcus senilis pattern lacks specificity as an index of coronary heart
disease risk. The funduscopic examination is an often-underused
method by which to assess the microvasculature, especially among
patients with established atherosclerosis, hypertension, or diabetes
mellitus. A mydriatic agent may be necessary for optimal visualization. A funduscopic examination should be performed routinely in
the assessment of patients with suspected endocarditis and those with
a history of acute visual change. Branch retinal artery occlusion or
visualization of a Hollenhorst plaque can narrow the differential diagnosis rapidly in the appropriate setting. Relapsing polychondritis may
manifest as an inflamed pinna or, in its later stages, as a saddle-nose
deformity because of destruction of nasal cartilage; granulomatosis
with polyangiitis (Wegener’s) can also lead to a saddle-nose deformity.
Chest Midline sternotomy, left posterolateral thoracotomy, or
infraclavicular scars at the site of pacemaker/defibrillator generator
implantation should not be overlooked and may provide the first clue
regarding an underlying cardiovascular disorder in patients unable to
provide a relevant history. A prominent venous collateral pattern may
suggest subclavian or vena caval obstruction. If the head and neck
appear dusky and slightly cyanotic and the venous pressure is grossly
elevated without visible pulsations, a diagnosis of superior vena cava
syndrome should be entertained. Thoracic cage abnormalities have
been well described among patients with connective tissue disease
syndromes. They include pectus carinatum (“pigeon chest”) and pectus excavatum (“funnel chest”). Obstructive lung disease is suggested
by a barrel chest deformity, especially with tachypnea, pursed-lip
breathing, and use of accessory muscles. The characteristically severe
kyphosis and compensatory lumbar, pelvic, and knee flexion of ankylosing spondylitis should prompt careful auscultation for a murmur of
aortic regurgitation (AR). Straight back syndrome refers to the loss of
the normal kyphosis of the thoracic spine and has been described in
patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and its variants. In some
patients with cyanotic congenital heart disease, the chest wall appears
to be asymmetric, with anterior displacement of the left hemithorax.
The respiratory rate and pattern should be noted during spontaneous
breathing, with additional attention to depth, audible wheezing, and
stridor. Lung examination can reveal adventitious sounds indicative of
pulmonary edema, pneumonia, or pleuritis.
Abdomen In some patients with advanced obstructive lung disease, the point of maximal cardiac impulse may be in the epigastrium.
The liver is frequently enlarged and tender in patients with chronic
heart failure. Systolic pulsations over the liver signify severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR). Splenomegaly may be a feature of infective
endocarditis, particularly when symptoms have persisted for weeks
or months. Ascites is a nonspecific finding but may be present with
advanced chronic right heart failure, constrictive pericarditis, hepatic
cirrhosis, or an intraperitoneal malignancy. The finding of an elevated
JVP implies a cardiovascular etiology. In nonobese patients, the aorta
typically is palpated between the epigastrium and the umbilicus. The
sensitivity of palpation for the detection of an abdominal aortic aneurysm (pulsatile and expansile mass) decreases as a function of body
size. Because palpation alone is not sufficiently accurate to establish
this diagnosis, a screening ultrasound examination is advised when
appropriate. The presence of an arterial bruit over the abdomen suggests high-grade atherosclerotic disease, although precise localization
is difficult.
Extremities The temperature and color of the extremities, the
presence of clubbing, arachnodactyly, and pertinent nail findings can
be surmised quickly during the examination. Clubbing implies the
presence of central right-to-left shunting, although it has also been
described in patients with endocarditis. Its appearance can range from
cyanosis and softening of the root of the nail bed, to the classic loss
of the normal angle between the base of the nail and the skin, to the
skeletal and periosteal bony changes of hypertrophic osteoarthropathy,
which is seen rarely in patients with advanced lung or liver disease.
Patients with the Holt-Oram syndrome have an unopposable, “fingerized” thumb, whereas patients with Marfan syndrome may have
arachnodactyly and a positive “wrist” (overlapping of the thumb and
fifth finger around the wrist) or “thumb” (protrusion of the thumb
beyond the ulnar aspect of the hand when the fingers are clenched over
the thumb in a fist) sign. The Janeway lesions of endocarditis are nontender, slightly raised hemorrhages on the palms and soles, whereas
Osler’s nodes are tender, raised nodules on the pads of the fingers or
toes. Splinter hemorrhages are classically identified as linear petechiae
in the midposition of the nail bed and should be distinguished from
the more common traumatic petechiae, which are seen closer to the
distal edge.
Lower extremity or presacral edema in the setting of an elevated JVP
defines volume overload and may be a feature of chronic heart failure
or constrictive pericarditis. Lower extremity edema in the absence
of jugular venous hypertension may be due to profound hypoalbuminemia as seen in nephrotic syndrome or liver failure. Other causes
include lymphatic or venous obstruction or, more commonly, venous
insufficiency, as would be further suggested by the appearance of varicosities, venous ulcers (typically medial in location), and brownish
cutaneous discoloration from hemosiderin deposition (eburnation).
Pitting edema can also be seen in patients who use dihydropyridine
calcium channel blockers. A Homan’s sign (posterior calf pain on active
dorsiflexion of the foot against resistance) is neither specific nor sensitive for deep venous thrombosis. Muscular atrophy or the absence of
hair along an extremity is consistent with severe arterial insufficiency
or a primary neuromuscular disorder.
■ CARDIOVASCULAR EXAMINATION
Jugular Venous Pressure and Waveform The JVP is the single
most important bedside measurement from which to estimate the volume status. The internal jugular vein is preferred because the external
jugular vein is valved and not directly in line with the superior vena
cava and right atrium. Nevertheless, the external jugular vein has been
used to discriminate between high and low central venous pressure
(CVP) when tested among medical students, residents, and attending
Physical Examination of the Cardiovascular System
1817CHAPTER 239
physicians. Precise estimation of the central venous or right atrial
pressure from bedside assessment of the jugular venous waveform has
proved difficult. Venous pressure traditionally has been measured as
the vertical distance between the top of the jugular venous pulsation
and the sternal inflection point (angle of Louis). A distance >4.5 cm
at 30° elevation is considered abnormal. However, the actual distance
between the mid-right atrium and the angle of Louis varies considerably as a function of both body size and the patient angle at which the
assessment is made (30°, 45°, or 60°). The use of the sternal angle as a
reference point leads to systematic underestimation of CVP, and this
method should be used less for semiquantification than to distinguish
a normal from an abnormally elevated CVP. The use of the clavicle
may provide an easier reference for standardization. Venous pulsations
above this level in the sitting position are clearly abnormal, as the distance between the clavicle and the right atrium is at least 10 cm. The
patient should always be placed in the sitting position, with the legs
dangling below the bedside, when an elevated pressure is suspected in
the semisupine position. It should also be noted that bedside estimates
of CVP are made in centimeters of water, but must be converted to
millimeters of mercury to provide correlation with accepted hemodynamic norms (1.36 cmH2
O = 1.0 mmHg).
The venous waveform sometimes can be difficult to distinguish from
the carotid pulse, especially during casual inspection. Nevertheless, the
venous waveform has several characteristic features, and its individual
components can be appreciated in most patients (Fig. 239-1). The
arterial pulsation is not easily obliterated with palpation; the venous
waveform in patients with sinus rhythm is usually biphasic, while the
carotid pulse is monophasic; and the jugular venous pulsation should
change with changes in posture or inspiration (unless the venous pressure is quite elevated).
The venous waveform is divided into several distinct peaks. The
a wave reflects right atrial presystolic contraction and occurs just after
the electrocardiographic P wave, preceding the first heart sound (S1
).
A prominent a wave is seen in patients with reduced right ventricular
compliance; a cannon a wave occurs with atrioventricular (AV) dissociation and right atrial contraction against a closed tricuspid valve. In a
patient with a wide complex tachycardia, the appreciation of cannon a
waves in the jugular venous waveform identifies the rhythm as ventricular in origin. The a wave is not present with atrial fibrillation. The x
descent defines the fall in right atrial pressure after inscription of the a
wave. The c wave, which occurs as the closed tricuspid valve is pushed
into the right atrium during early ventricular systole, interrupts this
x descent and is followed by a further descent. The v wave represents
atrial filling (atrial diastole) and occurs during ventricular systole. The
height of the v wave is determined by right atrial compliance as well
as the volume of blood returning to the right atrium either antegrade
from the cavae or retrograde through an incompetent tricuspid valve.
In patients with TR, the v wave is accentuated and the subsequent fall
in pressure (y descent) is rapid. With progressive degrees of TR, the
v wave merges with the c wave, and the right atrial and jugular vein
waveforms become “ventricularized.” The y descent, which follows the
peak of the v wave, can become prolonged or blunted with obstruction
to right ventricular inflow, as may occur with tricuspid stenosis or
pericardial tamponade. Normally, the venous pressure should fall by
at least 3 mmHg with inspiration. Kussmaul’s sign is defined by either
a rise or a lack of fall of the JVP with inspiration and is classically
associated with constrictive pericarditis, although it has been reported
in patients with restrictive cardiomyopathy, massive pulmonary embolism, right ventricular infarction, and advanced left ventricular (LV)
systolic heart failure. It is also a common, isolated finding in patients
after cardiac surgery without other hemodynamic abnormalities.
Venous hypertension sometimes can be elicited by passive leg elevation or performance of the abdominojugular reflux maneuver. When
these signs are positive, a volume-overloaded state with limited compliance of an overly distended or constricted venous system is present.
Abdominojugular reflux is produced with firm and consistent pressure
over the upper portion of the abdomen, preferably over the right upper
quadrant, for >15 s. A positive response is defined by a sustained rise
of >3 cm in the JVP during the application of firm abdominal pressure.
The response should be assessed after 10 s of continuous pressure to
allow for respiratory artifacts and tensing of the abdominal muscles to
subside. Patients must be coached to refrain from breath holding or
a Valsalva-like maneuver during the procedure. Performance of the
abdominojugular reflux maneuver is useful in predicting a pulmonary
artery wedge pressure >15 mmHg in patients with heart failure.
Although the JVP estimates right ventricular filling pressure, it has
a predictable relationship with the pulmonary artery wedge pressure.
A
B
C
Severe
ECG
JVP
Mild
Normal
A
A
A
A
A
IV III
I II III
I II K
C
C
C
V
V
V
P
V
V
V
X
X
X
X
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
FIGURE 239-1 A. Jugular venous pulse wave tracing (top) with heart sounds (bottom)
in a patient with reduced right ventricular compliance. The A wave represents right
atrial presystolic contraction and occurs just after the electrocardiographic P wave
and just before the first heart sound (I). In this example, the A wave is accentuated
and larger than normal due to decreased right ventricular compliance, as also
suggested by the right-sided S4
(IV). The C wave may reflect the carotid pulsation
in the neck and/or an early systolic increase in right atrial pressure as the right
ventricle pushes the closed tricuspid valve into the right atrium. The x descent
follows the A wave just as atrial pressure continues to fall. The V wave represents
atrial filling during ventricular systole and peaks at the second heart sound (II).
The y descent corresponds to the fall in right atrial pressure after tricuspid valve
opening. B. Jugular venous wave forms in mild (middle) and severe (top) tricuspid
regurgitation, compared with normal, with phonocardiographic representation of the
corresponding heart sounds below. With increasing degrees of tricuspid regurgitation,
the waveform becomes “ventricularized.” C. Electrocardiogram (ECG) (top), jugular
venous waveform (JVP) (middle), and heart sounds (bottom) in pericardial constriction.
Note the prominent and rapid y descent, corresponding in timing to the pericardial
knock (K). (Reproduced with permission from J Abrams: Synopsis of Cardiac Physical
Diagnosis, 2nd ed. Boston, Butterworth Heinemann, 2001.)
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