Cardiac DDx Flashcards
1
Q
What are the life-threatening causes of chest pain? (6)
A
- ACS
- Dissection
- Tamponade
- PE
- Tension pneumothorax
- Mediastinitis (e.g. oesophageal rupture)
2
Q
What are the broad categories of chest pain? (5)
A
- Cardiac – ACS/angina/dissection/inflammation/tamponade
- Respiratory – pleuritis/PNA/PE/COAD/lung Ca
- Gastrointestinal – GORD, oesophageal spasm, rupture (Boerhaave’s)
- MSK – rib contusion, #, costochondritis
- Psychitric – panic attack
3
Q
What are the cardiac causes of angina other than Coronary Artery Disease (and hypovolaemia)? (4)
A
- Worsening valve disease → angina
- Arrythmia → angina due to impaired coronary blood flow
- Pericardial effusion → angina due to impaired blood flow
- Inflammatory: pericarditis, myocarditis, endocarditis
4
Q
What BNP values are suggestive of HF?
A
- >100 highly sensitive for acute HF
- <50 → highly unlikely to be hF
5
Q
Collapse differentials (9)?
A
SOAR MAN Sleeps in Trauma
Syncope
- Structural cardiopulmonary disease
- Orthostatic syncope (can be delayed to 5 minutes) - inc. dehydration, bleeding, Addison’s
- Arrythmia
- Reflex syncope (cough, micturition)
Non syncopal
- Metabolic (hypoglycaemia, ETOH)
-
Autonomic hypotention (Parkinson’s, DM, MSA) & Anaemia
- Also Atypical – psychiatric (pseudosyncope or pseudoseizures)
- Neurological – seizures, epilepsy & vertigo. Stroke (vertebrobasilar insufficiency - rare)
- Sleep disorders – narcolepsy & cataplexy
- Traumatic brain injury
6
Q
Collapse history?
A
- Number, frequency and duration (days/wks/mths) of episodes
- Onset – with or without warning – if so for how long
- Classic reflex syncope = nausea, diaphoresis, feeling hot or cold
- No warning – more likely to be cardiac
•Position
- Supine to erect → orthostatic (can be several minutes of standing)
- Occurring in supine → more worrisome for arrythmia
•Provocating factors
- During vs. immediately after exercise: during exercise more serious (e.g. exercise triggered tachyarrythmia), if immediately after more benign (reflex syncope)
- Urination, defecation, coughing or swallowing → situational syncope
- Warm & crowded place
- Stress, fear, intense pain
- Abrupt neck movements → carotid sinus hypersensitivity
- Pre-dromal symptoms: palpitations, SOB, CP, visual changes
- Post-dromal symptoms: confusion, incontinennce
- Family history
7
Q
What is your approach to investigation in patient with collapse?
A
- Clinical: collaterals, postural BP, BSLs & ECG, meds recently started
- Bloods: anaemia, metabolic acidosis/alkalosis
- Imaging:
- ECHO – looking for structural heart disease (e.g. AS, HOCM, pHTN)
- Carotid doppler - ?ICA stenosis (can worsen postural hypo)
•CTPA
- Neurologic if symptoms consistent –CTB, MRIB
- Special tests:
- Holter, telemetry or loop recorder – NSVT, pAF…etc
- Consider EST – if IHD is suspected
- Consider EEG
8
Q
If TTE, holter and ECG are completely normal and hx sounds reflex/vasovagal – what is the useful confirmatory test?
A
- Tilt-table testing – principally directed at unmasking susceptibility to vasovagal syncope
- Carotid sinus massage – exclusively directed to carotid sinus hypersensitivity
9
Q
What are the typical findings in tilt-table testing for following conditions?
- Reflex syncope
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Pseudosyncope
A
- Reflex syncope: significant fall in BP with TLOC or inability to maintain posture (if without TLOC – suggestive of Reflex syncope)
- Orthostatic hypotension: progressive ↓ in BP with/without symptoms
- Pseudosyncope: TLOC or inability to maintain posture in absence of BP drop