Lecture 17- Acute coronary syndrome Flashcards
pathology of acute coronary syndrome
- Atheromatous plaque rupture
- Coronary dissection (rarer)
- Coronary spasm (rarer)
- Not all that causes myocardial damage is coronary
Sub-occlusive=
NON-STEMI
Occlusive
= STEMI
categories of acute coronary syndrome: ST elevation ACS positive
STEMI
categories of acute coronary syndrome: ST elevation ACS without signs of myocardial damage (troponin)
aborted STEMI
categories of acute coronary syndrome: Non-ST elevation ACS with signs of myocardial damage (troponin)
NSTEMI
categories of acute coronary syndrome: Non-ST elevation ACS without signs of myocardial damage (troponin)
unstable angina
Myocardial infarction
Acute myocardial infarction (MI) defines cardiomyocyte necrosis in a clinical setting consistent with acute myocardial ischaemia.
A combination of criteria is required to meet the diagnosis of acute MI:
- increase and/or decrease of a cardiac biomarker (troponin)
- Symptoms of ischaemia.
- New or presumed new significant ST-T wave changes or left bundle branch block on 12-lead ECG.
- Imaging evidence of new or presumed new loss of viable myocardium or regional wall motion abnormality.
- Intracoronary thrombus detected on angiography or autopsy.
Type 1 MI
- is caused by an acute atherothrombotic coronary event- thrombus in coronary artery leading to decreased myocardial blood flow- myocardial necrosis
Type 2- MI
is a more heterogeneous entity, where a condition other than coronary artery disease (CAD) contributes to an acute imbalance between oxygen supply (e.g., hypoxemia, anemia, hypotension) and demand (e.g., tachycardia, hypertension).
Assessment of the patient: History
- Cardiac sounding?
- DULL?
- Central?
- Radiating?
- Relieved with GTN? How long did it take to work?
- How long have you had the pain?
- Is the pain getting worse?
- Cardiac dissection
- Pain worse on inspiration? Pleuritic?
Risk factors for MI
- Smoker
- Family history
- High cholesterol
- Hypertension
- Thrombophilia
Assessment of the patient: Examination
- BP (if systolic <90mmHg- cardiac shock)
- Tachy or bradycardia?
- Jugular venous pressure
- Lungs- crackles? Pulmonary oedema?
- Heart sounds- missing a murmur could be costly
- Cool peripheries
coronary artery anatomy
ECG territories
leads showing abnormal compelxes- septal
Septal= V1 and V2
leads showing abnormal complexes- anterior
Anterior: V1 and V6