Heart disease: causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment


Published: 10/19/2021 13:10:00 Updated: 10/19/2021

Heart disease is deformation and pathological changes in the structure of valves, septa and chamber walls, which lead to improper functioning of the organ and disruption of intracardiac hemodynamics.

The disease can be congenital or acquired. The chance of transmitting congenital heart disease from mother to child ranges from 3% to 50%. In clinically healthy parents, the risk of having a child with this pathology is 1% [1].

Heart disease is associated with a high risk of intrauterine and child mortality, sudden death in older patients, and also reduces the quality of life and ability to work, leading to disability.

Prevention of the disease includes proper pregnancy planning, a healthy lifestyle, timely diagnosis and treatment of pathology in the early stages. Surgery is considered the most effective therapy.

Classification and causes of heart defects

Based on their origin, there are two main classes of this disease.
Congenital heart disease develops in babies between the third and eighth weeks of pregnancy due to abnormal formation of the organ. Such pathologies can cause spontaneous abortions or stillbirth. In addition, risk factors include:

  • on the part of the parents: alcohol or drug addiction, genetic predisposition;
  • on the mother’s side: poor nutrition, previous infections (syphilis, measles, rubella), taking certain medications, metabolic disorders (obesity, diabetes, phenylketonuria), chronic diseases (damages of the respiratory and cardiovascular systems), poor environment, working in hazardous production.

Acquired heart defects develop throughout life.
They are caused by functional and structural changes in the organ due to infectious lesions, inflammatory and autoimmune processes in its tissues. An excessive load on the chambers of the heart is also considered a provoking factor, for example, when one chamber is forced to pump blood through a narrowed aorta, when an additional volume of blood enters the chamber from another chamber when the hole between them is not fused or when the valve is insufficient. Based on the location of the defect, they are distinguished:

  • for congenital heart disease: atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, narrowing of the aorta and tetralogy of Fallot;
  • with acquired heart disease: atherosclerotic, syphilitic, rheumatic forms or pathology caused by endocarditis, sepsis, autoimmune reactions, etc.

Based on the severity of hemodynamic disturbances inside the heart, a distinction is made between moderate and severe pathology or defect without affecting the movement of blood within the organ.
According to the general assessment of hemodynamics, heart defects are compensated, subcompensated or decompensated.

Based on the number of affected valves, multivalve (tricuspid or mitral) or combined heart disease (involving both valves and/or the aorta) is distinguished.

Heart valves and their defects

The heart has four chambers: two atria and two ventricles. From the atria, blood enters the ventricles, and then through the valves, with the help of contractions of the heart muscle, enters the arteries. Valves ensure blood flow in the desired direction and quantity. If they close or do not open completely, this prevents normal blood circulation.

As a result, the heart gradually increases in volume and stretches, compensating for blood deficiency and working under constant overload. Exhaustive work of the heart can cause the development of serious cardiovascular diseases, such as arrhythmia or heart failure. In addition, heart valve defects can cause complications due to certain ongoing infectious diseases.

Most often, heart defects are diagnosed in patients over sixty years of age. The reason is that with age, the valves of the valve apparatus lose their elasticity, and the heart increases in size. As a result, blood flow decreases and it unevenly fills the cavities of the heart - heart failure develops.

There are four types of heart valves, and each has a specific function:

  • Aortic : prevents blood from flowing from the aorta into the left ventricle of the heart.
  • Mitral : prevents the flow of blood from the left ventricle of the heart into the left atrium at the moment when the heart muscle contracts and blood is pushed into the vessels.
  • Pulmonary : Prevents the flow of blood from the pulmonary artery into the right ventricle of the heart.
  • Tricuspid : valve between the right ventricle of the heart and the right atrium.

If the valves are enlarged, narrowed, loose or torn, it becomes difficult for them to close, and blood flows back with each contraction of the heart. As a result, the heart experiences enormous stress and eventually loses its performance.

Depending on the form of the disease, heart valve defects can manifest as:

  • stenosis – narrowing of the lumen (opening) of the vessels through which blood flows. This significantly increases the load on the heart, as it makes it more difficult for blood to be pumped out.
  • insufficiency - damage to the heart valve leaflets, resulting in their inability to close completely. In such cases, the blood flows back.
  • a combination of stenosis and insufficiency - the affected valves form an obstacle to the passage of blood. In this case, some of the blood passes through the hole, but returns back into the next phase of the cardiac cycle.

Symptoms of heart disease

With a minor violation, the symptoms of the disease do not appear for a long time.
If hemodynamics are seriously impaired, shortness of breath, bluish skin, swelling, pain in the heart, rapid heartbeat, causeless cough, increased fatigue, decreased ability to work, dizziness and fainting, high or low blood pressure are observed. Auscultation also reveals a heart murmur. In newborns, heart disease is manifested by the appearance of cyanosis during breastfeeding, cold extremities and the tip of the nose, poor weight gain, and developmental delays.

Causes

Acquired heart pathology occurs due to:

  • infective endocarditis;
  • syphilis;
  • atherosclerosis;
  • rheumatism;
  • injuries of various types.

The causes of most cases of congenital heart defects are not fully diagnosed by doctors. These diseases can be caused by exposure to radiation in a pregnant woman. Viral and other infections suffered by a woman in the first trimester of pregnancy (hepatitis B, rubella, influenza) are dangerous. Taking drugs, alcohol and certain medications during pregnancy can also cause congenital diseases.

Diagnosis of heart defects

The doctor may suspect the disease during the initial examination based on external signs such as bluish or pale skin, shortness of breath at rest.
On auscultation, a characteristic heart murmur or rhythm disturbances are heard. Using palpation, the doctor identifies swelling, pulsation of veins, and the borders of the liver. Light and heart sounds are heard percussion, and the boundaries of the heart are determined. It is important to collect anamnesis: patient complaints (for children - symptoms observed by parents), chronic, hereditary and past infectious diseases.

To confirm and clarify the diagnosis, additional examinations are carried out.

Laboratory diagnosis of heart disease includes a general blood test (leukoformula, hematocrit), urine analysis according to Nechiporenko. Instrumental methods include electrocardiogram, 24-hour Holter monitoring, cardiac ultrasound, chest x-ray, MRI of the heart and large vessels, and ECHO-CG.

For those planning pregnancy and pregnant women, it is recommended to undergo a special set of examinations:

  • complete blood count, blood group and Rh factor, antibodies to Rh factor;
  • cytological examination of smears from the cervix and cervical canal;
  • test for TORCH infections (toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus infection, herpetic infection);
  • to exclude renal failure: biochemical blood test (creatinine, urea, potassium, calcium, phosphorus, triglycerides, alkaline phosphatase, cholesterol, glucose), ultrasound of the pelvic organs, CT and MRI of the abdominal organs;
  • pregnancy-associated plasma protein test;
  • molecular study of the number of X chromosomes;
  • genetic test to determine polymorphisms associated with the risk of developing arterial hypertension (hypertension) in the blood.

Self-diagnosis

To independently diagnose the state of the cardiovascular system, functional tests are carried out: Martinet-Kushelevsky, Kotov-Deshin, Rufier, with a 15-second run at the fastest pace, and others. You can familiarize yourself with the sampling methodology in the relevant articles on the Internet.

These are simple tests to roughly assess the adaptation of the heart and blood vessels to stress. In schools and universities, they are carried out in special medical physical education groups to monitor the well-being and fitness of students.

Treatment of heart disease

With congenital pathology, the diagnosis is usually known even before birth.
Only surgical treatment aimed at completely eliminating the cause is considered effective. The sooner an operation to correct a heart defect is performed, the greater the chance that the defect will not affect the child’s development, and the lower the risk of postoperative complications. If such intervention is not possible, then the child is prescribed a special regimen of physical activity and nutrition. The treatment tactics for an acquired disease require an integrated approach. In this subgroup of patients, medication (symptomatic) treatment, diet therapy, and lifestyle correction are first used. If there is no effect, worsening symptoms or risk of complications, surgery is prescribed.

There are several types of surgical intervention for heart defects:

  • bypass (creating a new path for blood flow bypassing the affected area of ​​the vessel);
  • endoprosthetics (replacement of the affected valve with a prosthesis);
  • separation (valvuloplasty) and dissection (valvotomy) of the valve leaflets.

Complications

If you have cardiac problems, medical supervision is always necessary. In the youngest patients, the pathology may disappear on its own, but this is a rare occurrence. Teenagers during puberty are often worried about arrhythmia or tachycardia (increased heart rate) - this is the price to pay for hormonal changes; in most cases, everything returns to normal on its own.

Despite the presence of happy outcomes, if a child has heart complaints, you should urgently consult a cardiologist.

Otherwise, complications may arise:

  • Secondary arterial hypertension (in the systemic and/or pulmonary circulation);
  • Destruction of valves and adaptive changes of the heart (dilatation or hypertrophy;
  • Poor circulation (other organs suffer, ischemia occurs - insufficient oxygen supply to the tissues);
  • Heart attack;
  • Pneumonia;
  • Heart failure.

Death is a common result of heart pathologies, especially with congenital defects.

Online consultation with a pediatrician

consultation cost: 500 rubles

Online consultation

During the consultation, you will be able to voice your problem, the doctor will clarify the situation, interpret the tests, answer your questions and give the necessary recommendations.

Prognosis for heart disease

Given the seriousness of the disease, the question of how long patients with heart disease live and how to increase their life expectancy arises.
According to statistics, 25% of children with congenital pathology die in early infancy and another 50% in the first year of life. Without treatment, about 10% of children survive into adolescence. Thanks to modern technologies, up to 80% of people with congenital heart disease live into middle age [2].

With valvular heart disease, there is a high percentage of sudden death, so the timeliness of surgical treatment in this subgroup of patients plays a decisive role.

Acquired pathology can manifest itself at a later age. Life expectancy in this case depends on the patient’s general health, physical endurance, individual characteristics, living and working conditions.

Etiology

The causes of heart problems in children are conventionally divided into large subgroups. Let's look at each one separately.

Mother's side

If during pregnancy a woman has suffered from rubella, systemic lupus erythematosus, syphilis, toxoplasmosis, if she has diabetes mellitus or other chronic diseases, then all this is reflected in the fetus.

The list of approved drugs for pregnant women is strictly limited; most antibiotics, warfarin and other drugs (they are called teratogenic) are too toxic for the fetus. Taking them increases the risk of spontaneous abortion (miscarriage) or various abnormalities in the development of the child.

Drinking alcohol, smoking and using drugs during pregnancy also leads to congenital pathologies in children.

Genetic disorders

Most often these are chromosomal abnormalities. But genetic predisposition and mutations are not considered the only cause of cardiac pathologies. In 90% of cases, the cause of heart problems is multifactorial.

Bad habits

We have already talked about how the state of the mother’s body affects children. But the risk factors for developing heart problems in children are similar to those in adults:

  • Smoking;
  • Alcohol;
  • Sedentary lifestyle;
  • Narcotic substances;
  • Stress;
  • Infections;
  • High cholesterol levels.

This list is more relevant for teenagers 14-17 years old than for kids. However, we must understand that nicotine and ethanol metabolism products destroy the myocardium and vascular wall in a child in the same way as in an adult. “Pampering” behind garages can result in a heart attack at age 30.

Statistics show that over the last decade the percentage of children with excess body weight has increased, which also negatively affects the heart. Myocardial infarction, due to obesity and other risk factors, has become “younger” and is already occurring in girls and boys aged 20-30 years, which was considered casuistry back in the 2000s.

Prevention and recommendations for heart defects

Congenital heart disease can be prevented only through a comprehensive assessment of the health status of parents when planning pregnancy, adherence to a nutritious diet and proper conditions for the pregnant woman.
Prevention of acquired heart disease consists of timely and complete cure of the underlying disease that caused the pathology. General recommendations include following a cardiotrophic diet, quitting smoking and alcohol, moderate physical activity, avoiding colds and infectious diseases, and undergoing regular examinations by a cardiologist.

Prices

Name of service (price list incomplete)Price
Appointment (examination, consultation) with a cardiologist, primary, therapeutic and diagnostic, outpatient1750 rub.
Prescription of treatment regimen (for up to 1 month)1800 rub.
Consultation (interpretation) with analyzes from third parties2250 rub.
Consultation with a candidate of medical sciences2500 rub.
Electrocardiography (ECG)1400 rub.
Echocardiography (ultrasound of the heart)3500 rub.

Prevention

The risk of heart disease can be reduced through timely treatment of diseases caused by streptococci - pharyngitis, sore throat. They are the most common causes of the development of rheumatism. If you already have this disease, then you must take a course of bicillin prophylaxis. It must be prescribed by a competent doctor.

If a person has been diagnosed with mitral valve prolapse or has already suffered from rheumatism, then for the purpose of prevention it is necessary to start taking antibiotics prescribed by a doctor for a certain time before medical interventions. These “interventions” include removal of tonsils, teeth, adenoids and other surgical operations.

The ABC-Medicine clinic provides complete diagnosis and treatment of heart defects of various forms. If you are concerned about the listed symptoms, be sure to sign up for an examination. Highly qualified specialists will individually prescribe treatment for the disease.

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