Aortic Regurgitation (AR)
Aortic Regurgitation is a valvular lesion in which the aortic valve fails to close completely during diastole, causing backward flow of blood from the aorta into the left ventricle (LV).
Normal Physiology
During diastole:
- Aortic valve closes
- Aortic pressure > LV pressure
- Coronary perfusion occurs
In AR:
- Blood leaks back into LV during diastole
- LV receives:
- Normal pulmonary venous return
- PLUS regurgitant volume
Result:
- Increased LVEDV
- Increased stroke volume
- Wide pulse pressure
Etiology
Acute Aortic Regurgitation
Life-threatening as LV has no time to adapt.
|
Cause |
Mechanism |
|
Infective endocarditis |
Valve leaflet destruction |
|
Aortic dissection |
Root disruption |
|
Trauma |
Valve rupture |
|
Prosthetic valve failure |
Sudden incompetence |
|
Iatrogenic |
TAVR/surgery complications |
Chronic Aortic Regurgitation
Most common form.
Valve Leaflet Causes
|
Cause |
Features |
|
Rheumatic heart disease |
Common in developing countries |
|
Bicuspid aortic valve |
Common congenital cause |
|
Infective endocarditis |
Perforation |
|
Degenerative disease |
Fibrosis/calcification |
|
Myxomatous degeneration |
Prolapse |
|
Congenital fenestrations |
Rare |
Aortic Root Causes
|
Cause |
Mechanism |
|
Hypertension |
Root dilation |
|
Marfan syndrome |
Annuloaortic ectasia |
|
Aortic aneurysm |
Root enlargement |
|
Syphilitic aortitis |
Ascending aortic dilation |
|
Ankylosing spondylitis |
Aortitis |
|
Giant cell arteritis |
Root disease |
|
Takayasu arteritis |
Aortic involvement |
|
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome |
Connective tissue weakness |
Pathophysiology
- Acute AR Pathophysiology
No adaptive LV dilation.Small stiff LV suddenly receives large regurgitant volume.
Results:
- Massive LVEDP rise
- Pulmonary edema
- Cardiogenic shock
- Hypotension
Unlike chronic AR:Pulse pressure may NOT be wide.
Chronic AR
Initial Compensation
LV adapts by:
- Eccentric hypertrophy
- Increased compliance
- Increased chamber size
This allows:
- Large stroke volume
- Near-normal filling pressures
Patients may remain asymptomatic for years.
Progressive Disease
As regurgitation worsens:
LV Changes
- LV dilation
- Increased wall stress
- Fibrosis
- Reduced contractility
Hemodynamic Changes
- Increased LVEDP
- Pulmonary congestion
- Reduced forward cardiac output
Eventually:
- Heart failure
- Arrhythmias
- Sudden death
Hallmark-Wide pulse pressure.
Example: BP 170/50 mmHg
Why?
Increased systolic BP
Due to:Increased stroke volume
Reduced diastolic BP
Due to:Rapid runoff back into LV
Comparison: Acute vs Chronic AR
|
Feature |
Acute AR |
Chronic AR |
|
LV adaptation |
None |
Present |
|
LV size |
Normal |
Dilated |
|
Pulse pressure |
Often normal |
Wide |
|
Peripheral signs |
Usually absent |
Present |
|
Pulmonary edema |
Severe |
Late |
|
Shock |
Common |
Rare initially |
|
Murmur |
Short/soft |
Long decrescendo |
|
Treatment |
Emergency surgery |
Timed surgery |
Peripheral Signs of Severe AR
These occur due to hyperdynamic circulation and wide pulse pressure.
|
Sign |
Description |
|
Corrigan pulse |
Water-hammer pulse |
|
de Musset sign |
Head bobbing |
|
Quincke sign |
Nailbed capillary pulsations |
|
Traube sign |
Pistol-shot femorals |
|
Duroziez sign |
Femoral to-and-fro murmur |
|
Hill sign |
Leg systolic BP > arm BP |
|
Becker sign |
Retinal pulsations |
|
Muller sign |
Uvular pulsation |
|
Rosenbach sign |
Hepatic pulsation |
|
Dancing carotid |
|
Symptoms
Acute AR Symptoms
Severe and sudden.
|
Feature |
Description |
|
Acute pulmonary edema |
Very common |
|
Severe dyspnea |
Sudden |
|
Hypotension |
Cardiogenic shock |
|
Chest pain |
Dissection |
|
Fever |
Endocarditis |
Chronic AR
Long asymptomatic phase.
Symptoms When Compensation Fails
|
Symptom |
Mechanism |
|
Exertional dyspnea |
LV failure |
|
Orthopnea |
Pulmonary congestion |
|
PND |
Severe HF |
|
Fatigue |
Reduced forward output |
|
Palpitations |
Hyperdynamic state |
|
Angina |
Reduced coronary perfusion |
|
Syncope |
Advanced disease |
Physical Examination
- Pulse-Collapsing pulse (water hammer pulse).Mechanism:Rapid upstroke and Rapid collapse
- Blood Pressure-Wide pulse pressure.
- Apex Beat-Displaced downward and laterally–Hyperdynamic–Diffuse
- Murmur –High-pitched blowing early diastolic decrescendo murmur(Mechanism-Regurgitant flow during diastole)
Best heard:
- Left sternal border
- 3rd–4th intercostal space
- Patient sitting forward
- End expiration
Austin Flint Murmur-Low-pitched mid-diastolic rumble at apex.
Mechanism:
- Regurgitant jet strikes anterior mitral leaflet
- Functional mitral stenosis
Indicates severe AR.
Acute AR Examination
May have:
- Soft/short murmur
- No peripheral signs
- Severe pulmonary edema
- Shock
Severity Assessment by Clinical Clues
|
Finding |
Suggests Severe AR |
|
Wide pulse pressure |
Yes |
|
Long diastolic murmur |
Yes |
|
Austin Flint murmur |
Severe |
|
Hyperdynamic apex |
Severe |
|
Peripheral signs |
Severe |
Investigations
ECG
May show:
- LV hypertrophy
- Left axis deviation
- Strain pattern
Acute AR may show nonspecific changes.
Chest X-ray
Chronic AR:
- Cardiomegaly
- LV enlargement
- Dilated ascending aorta
Acute AR:Pulmonary edema
Echocardiography — MOST IMPORTANT
|
Echo Finding |
Meaning |
|
Severe regurgitant jet |
Confirms AR |
|
LV function |
Compensation |
|
Hyperdynamic LV |
Early compensation |
|
Elevated LVEDP |
Severe disease |
|
Aortic root dilation |
Dissection/root disease |
|
Vegetations |
Endocarditis |
|
Pericardial effusion |
Dissection/tamponade |
|
RV function |
Pulmonary HTN/shock |
- Color Doppler-Regurgitant jet into LVOT.
- CW Doppler-Dense diastolic jet.
Transesophageal Echo (TEE)
Useful in:
- Endocarditis
- Acute AR
- Aortic dissection
- Intraoperative assessment
CT / MRI
Useful for:
- Aortic root disease
- Aneurysm
- Dissection
- Quantification when echo unclear
Cardiac Catheterization
Rarely needed now.
Used before surgery if:
- CAD suspected
- Echo inconclusive
Classification of Severity
|
Severity |
Features |
|
Mild |
Small jet |
|
Moderate |
Intermediate |
|
Severe |
Large jet + LV dilation |
Differential Diagnosis
|
Disease |
Distinguishing Feature |
|
Pulmonary regurgitation |
Graham Steell murmur |
|
Mitral stenosis |
Opening snap |
|
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy |
Systolic murmur |
|
PDA |
Continuous murmur |
Complications
|
Complication |
Mechanism |
|
LV failure |
Chronic overload |
|
Arrhythmias |
Dilated LV |
|
Pulmonary hypertension |
Backward transmission |
|
Sudden cardiac death |
Advanced disease |
|
Infective endocarditis |
Abnormal valve |
|
Aortic aneurysm/dissection |
Root disease |
Management
- Acute Severe AR-MEDICAL EMERGENCY.
- Stabilization
- Oxygen and Ventilation
- Vasodilators(Nitroprusside)
- Reduces afterload
- Improves forward flow
Inotropes-Dobutamine if shock
Avoid
|
Intervention |
Why Avoid |
|
Intra-aortic balloon pump |
Worsens AR |
|
Beta blockers |
Prolong diastole |
|
Severe bradycardia |
Increases regurgitation |
Why IABP is Contraindicated
Regurgitant Volume∝Diastolic Aortic Pressure×Diastolic Time
IABP inflates during diastole.
This:Raises aortic diastolic pressure/Increases regurgitant flow
Therefore:Worsens AR
Hemodynamic Goals in Severe AR (ICU)
|
Goal |
Rationale |
|
HR 80–100/min |
Reduce diastolic time |
|
Avoid bradycardia |
Prevent increased regurgitation |
|
Reduce afterload/SVR |
Promote forward flow |
|
Maintain contractility |
Preserve CO |
|
Avoid sudden hypertension |
Increases regurgitant volume |
Definitive Treatment
Emergency surgery.Especially for:
- Dissection
- Endocarditis
- Acute valve destruction
Chronic AR Management
Medical Therapy
Vasodilators
Useful especially if:
- Hypertension
- Not surgical candidate
Drugs:
- ACE inhibitors
- ARBs
- Nifedipine
Role of Beta Blockers
Generally limited in isolated severe AR because:
- Slower HR increases diastolic regurgitation time
However beneficial in:
- Marfan syndrome
- Aortic aneurysm disease
Indications for Surgery
Symptomatic Severe AR
AVR indicated regardless of EF.
Asymptomatic Severe AR
Operate if:
- LVEF ≤55%
- LVESD >50 mm
- LVESD index >25 mm/m²
- Progressive LV dilation
- Undergoing other cardiac surgery
Surgery Types
Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement (SAVR)
Standard treatment.
Mechanical Valve
Pros:Durable
Cons:Lifelong anticoagulation
Bioprosthetic Valve
Pros:No long-term anticoagulation
Cons:Structural degeneration
Valve Repair
Possible in selected:Root dilation/Bicuspid valve
TAVR in AR
Less established than in AS.
Used selectively.
Aortic Root Surgery
Needed if:
- Aneurysm
- Marfan syndrome
- Root dilation
Examples:
- Bentall procedure
- Valve-sparing root replacement
Follow-Up
|
Severity |
Echo Follow-up |
|
Mild |
Every 3–5 years |
|
Moderate |
Every 1–2 years |
|
Severe asymptomatic |
Every 6–12 months |
Pregnancy and AR
Chronic AR usually tolerated due to:
- Reduced SVR in pregnancy
Poor prognostic factors:
- Severe LV dysfunction
- Marfan syndrome with aortic root dilation
