PPT Cardiovascular Disease in Pregnancy REVISED
PPT Cardiovascular Disease in Pregnancy REVISED
PPT Cardiovascular Disease in Pregnancy REVISED
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for Pregnant Patients:
A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23). 2
EPIDEMIOLOGY
• In Indonesia, maternal mortality rate due to heart disease in
pregnancy ranges from 1-2%
• Main leading causes :
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American
Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Boestan IN. Penyakit Jantung & Kehamilan. Airlangga University Press; 2007.
4
Physiological Changes
in Cardiovascular
System during
Pregnancy
Hemodynamic Changes
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Various Medical
Condition during
Pregnancy
8
Valvular Heart Disease in Pregnancy
• Valvular heart disease (VHD),although not as
common as hypertension,heart failure or
coronary disease is an important,and
challenging, clinical entity.
• Some substantial advances have been made in
the understanding the disease including the
aetiology ,pathophysiology and its
characteristics.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Valvular Heart Disease in Pregnancy
• Valvular heart disease pathologies in women of child- bearing age are most
commonly congenital but may include rheumatic, acquired, and native
degenerative causes.
• Pregnancy in women with mechanical prosthetic heart valves is associated
with increased risk of fetal and maternal morbidity and mortality.
• Maternal risks include increased mortality, valve thrombosis–associated valvular
dysfunction, heart failure, stroke, and maternal hemorrhage.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Rheumatic Heart Disease
CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS of RF
Jones criteria
Kumar R, Antunes M, Beaton A, Mirabel M, Nkomo V, Okello E et al. Contemporary Diagnosis and Management of Rheumatic Heart Disease: Implications for Closing the Gap: A Scientific
Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;142(20).
Hypertensive Disorders in
Pregnancy
Hypertensive disorder in pregnancy are classified into 4 categories :
1. Preeclampsia/eclampsia
2. Gestational hypertension
3. Chronic hypertension
4. Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia
ACOG and AHA highlighted the need for a multidisciplinary management strategy
incorporating lifestyle and behavioral modifications, including diet, exercise,
and smoking cessation, as well as EMR–based standardized algorithms
targeting cardiovascular risk factors.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Hypercholesterolemia in
Pregnancy
• Total cholesterol, triglycerides (TG), and low-density lipoproteins (LDL) levels rise
steadily during pregnancy and reach peak levels at the time of delivery.
• However, neither TG nor total cholesterol >250 mg/dL in normal pregnancies.27
• After delivery, major lipoprotein levels decline over the next 3 months to near
prepregnancy levels (Data Supplement Figure 3).
• Estimation of atherosclerotic CVD risk and documentation of baseline low-
density lipo- proteins with a lipid panel are recommended for adults who
are ≥20 years of age and not on lipid-lowering therapy.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Arrhythmias in Pregnancy
• Sustained arrhythmias are more frequent in patients with underlying structural
heart disease or thyroid/electrolyte disturbances.
• Stable SVT treatment should be no different in pregnant patients —> if vagal
maneuvers fail, then intravenous adenosine may be used.
• Catheter ablation for atrial arrhythmias may be needed if medical therapy fails,
ideally with minimal radiation exposure.
• New-onset atrial fibrillation in pregnancy usually indicates underlying heart
disease and should be treated on an inpatient basis by a cardiologist. If the patient
is unstable, direct cardioversion is recommended over chemical cardioversion
because it is highly safe and effective.
More complex arrhythmias require a cardio-obstetrics team approach, and management
strategies may include initiation or titration of antiarrhythmic therapy or consideration of
an electrophysiological study and radiofrequency ablation.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Aortic Disease and Pregnancy
• Aortopathy in the pregnant woman carries substantial cardiovascular risk because of the
combination of hemodynamic changes and hormonally driven structural
effects on the integrity of vascular/connective tissue.
• The heritability and syndromic features of genetic aortopathies are heterogeneous, as
is the risk of pregnancy-associated maternal cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Venous Thromboembolism (VTE)
• PULMONARY EMBOLISM
• The diagnosis of PE is challenging because the presentation often overlaps with
symptoms common during normal pregnancy
• It therefore requires a high index of suspicion, particularly in the presence of risk
factors such as a history of VTE or thrombophilia.
• The initial evaluation for PE should include ECG, chest x-ray, and blood tests to
rule out alternative causes such as ischemia, anemia, or infection.
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Pulmonary
Embolism
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T,
Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular
Considerations in Caring for Pregnant Patients:
A Scientific Statement From the American
Heart Association. Circulation.
2020;141(23).
Congenital Heart Disease in Pregnancy
• Based on ROPAC (2007-2018) —> among 5739 pregnancies in 53 countries
CHD was the most prevalent form of structural heart disease (57 %)
• United Kingdom and Ireland Confidential Enquiries into maternal deaths reported that of
910 maternal deaths between 2009 and 2014, 22.5 percent were caused by heart
disease, and a minority from congenital heart disease
• Maternal cardiac and neonatal complication rates are considerable in pregnant women
with congenital heart disease.
• Patients with impaired subpulmonary ventricular systolic function and/or severe
pulmonary regurgitation are at increased risk for adverse cardiac outcomes.
1. Roos-Hesselink J, Baris L, Johnson M, et al. Pregnancy outcomes in women with cardiovascular disease: evolving trends over 10 years in the ESC Registry Of Pregnancy And Cardiac disease (ROPAC). Eur
Heart J 2019; 40:3848.
2. https://www.npeu.ox.ac.uk/mbrrace-uk/reports/confidential-enquiry-into-maternal-deaths.
3. Khairy P, Ouyang D, Fernandes S, Lee-Parritz A, Economy K, Landzberg M. Pregnancy Outcomes in Women With Congenital Heart Disease. Circulation. 2006;113(4):517-524.
Congenital Heart Disease in Pregnancy
Xie D, Fang J, Liu Z, Wang H, Yang T, Sun Z et al. Epidemiology and major subtypes of congenital heart defects in Hunan Province, China. Medicine. 2018;97(31):e11770.
Diagnosis of
Cardiovascular
Disease
during
Pregnancy
Electrocardiography
1.The electrocardiogram of most pregnant women has a left
heart axis deviation of 15-20 degree.
2.The ST/T wave changes are transient, with inverted Q and T
waves in lead III, and T inversion in V1-V2 or up to V3.
3.The changes may mimic left ventricular hypertrophy or
other structural heart disease.
4.Holter monitoring should be performed in patients with a
known history of paroxysmal or persistent arrhythmias
(ventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation/flutter) or who
complain of palpitations.
Panduan Tatalaksana Penyakit Kardiovaskular pada Kehamilan. PERKI. 2021.
Echocardiography
1.Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) examination is the
examination method that is often chosen for pregnant women,
because it can be repeated, widely available, relatively
inexpensive, and can be used both in the clinic and in many
other rooms in the hospital.
2.Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is relatively safe,
however, the risk of vomiting/aspiration and a sudden
increase in intra-abdominal pressure may occur, and fetal
condition monitoring is necessary.
34
Procedures should follow the “as low as reasonably” principle
● Use echo-guidance when possible
● Place the source as distant as possible
from the patient and the receiver as close
as possible to the patient
● Use only low-dose fluoroscopy
● Favour anteroposterior projections
● Avoid direct radiation of the abdominal
region
● Collimate as tightly as possible to the area
of interest
● Minimize fluoroscopy time
Zero fluoroscopy
● Utilize an experienced cardiologist
2018 ESC Guidelines for the management of cardiovascular diseases during pregnancy. European
Heart Journal, 39(34), pp.3165-3241.
Radiation Exposure in Septal Defect and Ductus
Arteriosus Closure with Fluoroscopy Guiding in
NCCHK
Evenpy though the dose of
could be minimal, it is
fluor o s DAP
b e t t e r to avoid
Flu
ti oro
me ( m in)
c othe radiation
sure s c o mpletely 9. 36 u Gy m2
Atrial Septal Defec t
Ventricular
sc op y 4.0 e 35 uGym2
Septal Defect
Patent
8
4.2
pregnancy
during 37.60 uGy.m2
Ductus
xp o Arteriosus
0. 7
Data updated per May 2021
Mahesh, M., 2001. Fluoroscopy: Patient Radiation Exposure Issues. RadioGraphics, 21(4),
pp.1033-1045.
Our Initial
Zero
Fluoroscopy
Experience
in NCCHK
Our Experience of Zero Fluoroscopy ASD closure in
NCCHK
No Age (year) Diagnosis Device Procedural time
Scary?
Maybe
But
why
walk
Therapy and follow-up of pregnant women with
cardiovascular disease requires continuous
collaboratio
from obstetrics and gynecology specialists
Mehta L, Warnes C, Bradley E, Burton T, Economy K, Mehran R et al. Cardiovascular Considerations in Caring for
Pregnant Patients: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2020;141(23).
Pregnant women have various hemodynamic
changes that are physiological in nature.