19 - IHD, AF and Heart Failure Flashcards
What does ischaemic heart disease encompass?
Stable Angina: fixed stenosis of coronary artery
ACS: rupture of stenosis leading to thrombus formation
What are some of the risk factors for IHD?
What are some symptoms of stable angina, and what would suggest an ACS?
Symptoms:
- Precipitated by physical exertion.
- Constricting discomfort in the front of the chest, neck, shoulders, jaw, or arms.
- Relieved by rest or GTN within about 5 minutes.
- Atypical angina may have GI discomfort, dyspnea, nausea
Suspect ACS:
- Pain that is continuous >15 mins
- Pain at rest
- Pain brought on by breathing.
- Pain with dizziness, palpitations, tingling, or difficulty swallowing
- Haemodynamic instability e.g systolic bp <90
How is angina initially investigated?
Stable: usually on history
- ECG to look for ischaemic changes (e.g Q waves, ST elevation, LBBB)
- FBC to exclude anaemia
- TFTs to exclude hyperthyroidism that can make angina worse
Unstable: urgent referral to cardiology for trop tests and ECG
If your angina is atypical or the ECG shows ischaemic changes, what investigation is done next?
CT Coronary Angiography
Whilst awaiting diagnostic testing for stable angina, what medication should you provide a patient with?
- Prescribe sublingual GTN (see image)
- Consider 75mg aspirin daily until diagnosis
What information and support should you provide for a person with a new diagnosis of stable angina?
- Clearly explain the diagnosis e.g factors that provoke (cold, eating a large meal, emotional stress, exerton), long term course, how it is managed
- Advise the person to seek help if sudden increase in severity or frequency
- Discuss benefits and adverse effects of treatment (e.g flushing, headaches, light headedness)
- Assess cardiovascular risk and manage risk factors
- Tell patient they need to inform the DVLA
- Tell patient they may need to change work if lots of heavy manual labour
- If patients take PDEi for ED tell them not to take their GTN for at least 24 hours of last dose of PDEi. If take PDEi and have angina attack call 999 and do not use GTN. If no ED, take GTN before sexual intercourse to prevent attack
- If angina on small amount of exertion consider in flight oxygen for travel
How is stable angina managed?
Symptomatic drugs, Preventative Drugs, Lifestyle changes
- Sublingual GTN
- Beta blocker or CCB (diltiazem or verapamil)
- If both contraindicated long acting nitrate e.g isosorbide mononitrate or nicorandil
- 75mg aspirin daily for secondary prevention
- Consider ACEi if diabetic and angina
- Offer statin and antihypertensive treatment
What are the side effects of GTN and what advice do you need to give patients when starting this?
- Headaches
- Flushing
- Dizziness
If have to take more than 2 doses and pain still not gone call 999. Wait 5 minutes between doses
If first line drugs do not treat angina, what can be given next?
Second line management
Combine a beta blocker and long-acting dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker
Use nifedipine as otherwise can cause heart block with verapamil
If second line drugs do not work for angina, what management can be done next?
Third line management
- Coronary angiography to look for stenosis
- If stenosis revascularisation with either CABG or PCI
What lifestyle advice should you give someone with angina?
Manage risk factors:
- Smoking cessation
- Glycaemic control
- Hypertension
- Hyperlipidaemia
- Weight loss
- Alcohol intake
When should you refer a person with newly diagnosed angina?
- Pain at rest
- Pain on minimal exertion
- Getting progressively worse despite treatment
How should you follow up patients with established angina?
At every appointment offer info on:
- Managing cardiovascular risk
- Physical exertion including sexual activity
- Driving
- Air travel
- Work
How is chest pain classified and what are some of the causes of this?
- Cause: cardiac or non-cardiac
- Type: localised or poorly localised, pleuritic or non pleuritic
- Cardiac: ACS, stable angina, pericarditis, cardiac tamponade, arrhythmias, myocarditis
- Respiratory: PE, pneumothorax, pneumonia, asthma, pleural effusion
- GI: acute pancreatitis, peptiv ulcer disese, GORD, oesophagitis
- MSK: costochondritis, rib fracture, disc prolapse
- Cancer
- Herpes zoster
- Bornholm’s disese (Coxiesakie Virus)
- Precordial catch (Texidor twinge)
- Psychogenic
If a patient does not require admission for chest pain, what investigations should you carry in primary care?
- ECG
- Blood glucose, lipid profiles, U’s and E’s
- FBC
- TFTs
- CRP and ESR for inflammation or infection
- CXR for heart failure (size) or lung pathology (e.g pleural effusion, cancer, lobar collapse)
What is the early management for unstable angina and NSTEMIs?
- Oxygen: if evidence of hypoxia, pulmonary oedema
- Nitrates: sublingual GTN or IV isosorbide dinitrate to relieve ischaemic pain. If pain continues give morphin by slow IV injection and an antiemetic
- Aspirin 300mg chewed or dispersed
- Fondaparinux sc injection (Antithrombin therapy)
- Clopidogrel 300-600mg or Ticagrelor (P2Y12) 180mg as soon as diagnosis made
- Betablocker when clinically stable unless contraindicated (asthmatic, using CCB, HR<60, Sys BP<100)
- Full clinical history and exam, Trop test, ECG, work out GRACE score and decide if PCI
What is the GRACE score?
Estimates admission-6 month mortality for patients with acute coronary syndrome
Helps you to decide what management to carry out
What drug management is used for secondary prevention after an NSTEMI or unstable angina?
- Aspirin 75mg daily indefinitely
- Ticagrelor 90mg BD for 12 months
- ACEi such as ramipril depending on BP and renal function indefinitely
- Betablocker for 12 months or indefinitely if reduce LV ejection fraction
- Statin 80mg atorvastatin depending on LFTs indefinitely
ATABS
When should you offer PCI to patients with an NSTEMI or unstable angina?
- Immediately if unstable
- If predicted 6‑month mortality above 3.0% carry out CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY within 72 hours of admission for potential PCA
- If <3.0% give conservative management
How should you manage a STEMI in the early stages?
- Oxygen
- Nitrates and Morphine for ischaemic pain
- Aspirin 300mg chewed or dispersed in water
- Clopidogrel or Ticagrelor
- PCI if can be carried out within 90 minutes of diagnosis with unfractionated heparin
- If PCI cannot be carried out within 90 minutes of diagnosis give unfractionated heparin plus a thrombolytic like alteplase or streptokinase
What is cardiac rehabilitation?
Designed to improve your cardiovascular health if you have experienced heart attack, heart failure, angioplasty or heart surgery. Cardiac rehab has three equally important parts:
- Exercise counseling and training
- Education for heart-healthy living e.g smoking and nutrition
- Counseling to reduce stress
What non-pharmacological secondary prevention is offered to patients after an MI?
- Cardiac rehabilitation
- Lifestyle changes e.g smoking cessation, healthy diet, moderate physical activity for 150 minutes a week, losing weight, lowering alcohol
- Reduce any risk fators
What are some of the typical symptoms of a heart attack?
- Pain around the shoulder blades, jaw, neck, arm
- Indigestion
- Discomfort or tightness in the neck or arm
What is preserved and reduced ejection fraction?
- Reduced when below 40%
- Work out by doing SV/EDV x 100%
- Preserved ejection fraction when the left ventricle loses the ability to relax properly
What are some symptoms of heart failure?
- dyspnoea
- cough: may be worse at night and associated with pink/frothy sputum
- orthopnoea
- paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea
- wheeze (‘cardiac wheeze’)
- weight loss (‘cardiac cachexia’): may be hidden by oedema
- bibasal crackles on examination
- signs of right-sided heart failure: raised JVP, ankle oedema,hepatomegaly
What is heart failure and when should you suspect it?
The ability of the heart to maintain the circulation of blood is impaired
Symptoms:
- Breathlessness (orthopnea, nocturnal, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea)
- Fluid retention (ankle/abdominal swelling, weight gain)
- Fatigue
- Reduced exercise tolerance
- Lightheadedness
Risk Factors
- Coronary artery disease (e.g history of MI, HTN, AF, DM)
- Drugs including alcohol
- Family history of heart failure or sudden cardiac death <40
What investigations should you do if you suspect chronic heart failure?
NT-pro-BNP
(Hormone produced by left ventricular myocardium in response to strain. Very high levels associated with poor prognosis)
Send for transthoracic echocardiogram if raised, time frame depending on how raised
What other investigations in primary care can you do for suspected chronic heart failure?
What are you looking for on examination with chronic heart failure?
Examine for
- Tachycardia >100bpm
- Laterally displaced apex beat
- Heart murmurs
- Hypertension
- Raised JVP
- Enlarged liver
- Respiratory signs like basal crepitations, pleural effusions
- Dependent oedma
- Ascites
- Obesity
ASSESS AND MANAGE ANY UNDERLYING CAUSES OF HEART FAILURE.
What factors can affect natriuretic peptide levels?
This test is very non-specific if positive!!!