Management Of ACS Flashcards

1
Q

What are the symptoms and signs of ACS?

A

Symptoms: chest/back/jaw pain, indigestion, sweatiness, SOB, none, death

Signs: distress, tachycardia, HF, shock, arrhythmia, none

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2
Q

What is the definition of an MI?

A

Any elevation in troponin in a clinical setting consistent with myocardial ischaemia

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3
Q

Type 1 MI

A

Spontaneous MI due to primary coronary event (coronary artery plaque rupture and thrombus formation)

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4
Q

Type 2 MI

A

Increased O2 demand or decreased O2 supply (eg. HF, sepsis, anaemia etc.)

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5
Q

Type 3 MI

A

Sudden cardiac death

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6
Q

Type 4 MI

A

A: MI associated with PCI
B: MI caused by stent thrombosis documented by angiography or PM

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7
Q

Type 5 MI

A

MI associated with CABG

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8
Q

What score is used to risk assess chest pain patients?

A
  • HEART score
  • history, ECG, age, risk factors, troponin
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9
Q

What are the non-coronary (type 2) causes of elevated troponin?

A
  • congestive HF (acute decompensation)
  • tachyarrhythmias (SVT, AF, VT)
  • PE
  • sepsis
  • apical ballooning syndrome
  • anything that stresses the heart
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10
Q

What are the causes of chronic troponin elevation?

A
  • renal failure
  • chronic heart failure
  • infiltrative cardiomyopathies eg. Haemochromatosis, sarcoidosis etc.
  • infiltrative troponin can help separate chronic elevation from MI
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11
Q

What is unstable angina?

A
  • acute coronary event without a rise in troponin
  • clinical presentation of MI + ECG changes/tight thrombotic narrowing on coronary angiography
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12
Q

Classify region of infarct and vessel affected

A
  • inferior = RCA or L circumflex
  • posterior = circumflex or RCA
  • lateral = L circumflex
  • anteroseptal = LAD
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13
Q

What characterises LBBB and why is it important to note?

A
  • widened QRS >120ms/3 squares
  • can indicate a new infarction
  • if old, can obscure an ST elevation during an infarct
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14
Q

What leads correspond to the inferior region of the heart?

A

II, III and aVF

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15
Q

What leads correspond to the lateral region of the heart?

A

I, aVL, aVR, V5 and V6

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16
Q

What leads correspond to the anterior region of the heart?

A

V3 and V4

17
Q

What leads correspond to the septal region of the heart?

A

V1 and V2

18
Q

What is the immediate management of an MI?

A
  • ABC
  • ambulance attached to defibrillator
  • oral aspirin
  • IV unfractioned heparin and morphine
  • anti-emetics
  • clopidogrel
  • ticagrelor in hospital
  • activate PPCI
19
Q

What is the secondary prevention for an MI?

A
  • ACEi
  • BB
  • statins
  • epleronone (if diabetes and LVSD or HF)
  • cardiac rehab
  • if still LVSD at >9 months consider primary prevention ICD
20
Q

What are the possible complications of an MI?

A
  • arrhythmias
  • heart failure
  • cardiogenic shock
  • myocardial rupture
  • psychological
21
Q

What is the management of an NSTEMI?

A
  • monitor for complications
  • aspirin
  • clopidogrel/ticagrelor
  • LMWH/fondaparinux
  • secondary prevention
  • echo
  • cardiac rehab