acute coronary syndrome (acs), medicine

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ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME MARYAM JAMILAH BINTI ABDUL HAMID 082013100002 IMS BANGALORE

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Page 1: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME

MARYAM JAMILAH BINTI ABDUL HAMID082013100002

IMS BANGALORE

Page 2: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

LEARNING OUTCOME•Definition•Etiology•Pathogenesis•Clinical features• Investigation•Management•Prognosis

Page 3: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

INTRODUCTIONAcute coronary syndrome: Encompasses both

unstable angina and myocardial infarction (MI)

Unstable angina: Characterized by new-onset or rapidly worsening angina (crescendo angina),

angina on minimal exertion or angina at rest in the absence of myocardial damage

MI: Symptoms occur at rest and there is evidence of myocardial necrosis, as demonstrated by an

elevation in cardiac troponin or CK-MB isoenzyme

Page 4: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

ETIOLOGY•Atherosclerosis•Arteritis•Coronary dissection• Embolism•Coronary mural thickening•Causes of coronary luminal narrowing•Congenital coronary artery disease

Page 5: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

PATHOGENESIS

Page 6: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

UNSTABLE ANGINA• Pattern of pain that is progressive with increasing frequency

• Precipitated by less effort

• Often occurs at rest. Tends to be long duration.• Induced by disruption of atherosclerotic plaques, with

superadded thrombosis, embolization & vasospasm.• Pre Infarction Angina

Page 7: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION

TYPES•TRANSMURAL •SUBENDOCARDIAL

Page 8: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

LOCATION OF INFARCT

•LAD Anterior & Apical LV& 2/3 IV Septum [40--50%]

•RCA Post & Basal LV & Post 1/3 of IV Septum [30--40%]

•LCA Lateral wall of LV [15 - 20% ]

Page 9: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine
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Page 13: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

CLINICAL FEATURESSYMPTOMS

• Prolonged cardiac pain: chest, throat, arms, epigastrium or back

• Anxiety and fear of impending death

• Nausea & vomiting

• Breathlessness

• Collapse/syncope

Page 14: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

PHYSICAL SIGNS• Signs of sympathetic activation: pallor, sweating,

tachycardia• Signs of vagal activation: vomiting, bradycardia• Signs of impaired myocardial function

Hypotension, oliguria, cold peripheriesNarrow pulse pressureRaised JVPS3S1 –quietApical impulse: diffuseLung crepitation

• Signs of tissue damage: fever• Signs of complications: mitral regurgitation,

pericarditis

Page 15: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

Condition Duration Quality Location Associated features

Unstable

angina10-20 min Pressure,

tightness, heaviness, burning

Retrosternal, often with radiation to or isolated discomfort in neck, jaw, sholders, or arms- freq. left

Precipitated by low exertion, at rest, exposure to cold, psychologic stressS4 gallop or mitral regurgitation murmur during pain

Acute MI

Variable; often >30 min

Unrelieved with nitroglycerinMay be associated with heart failure or arrhythmia

Page 16: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

KILLIP CLASS• 1967, Acute myocardial infarction

• Focus on physical examination & development of heart failure to predict risk

• Class I: No evidence of heart failure (mortality 6%)

• Class II: Mild to moderate heart failure (S3 gallop, rales < half-way up lung fields or elevated JVP)

• Class III: Pulmonary edema (mortality 38%)

• Class IV: Cardiogenic shock defined as SBP <90 mmHg, signs of hypoperfusion; oligouria, cyanosis, swelling (mortality 67%)

Page 17: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

RISK STRATIFICATION

Page 18: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

INVESTIGATION• Electrocardiography

•Plasma cardiac biomarkers

•Other blood tests

•Chest X-Ray

• Echocardiography

Page 19: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

ECG

• Confirming diagnosis

• To be repeated

• Limitation: difficult to interpret if bundle branch block (BBB) or

previous MI present

• Best seen in the leads ‘face’ ischaemic or infected area

Page 20: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

• Anteroseptal infarction: V1 to V4

• Anterolateral infarction: V4 to V6, aVL, lead I

• Inferior infarction: lead II, lead III, aVF, ‘reciprocal’ changes of ST depression on lead I, aVL and anterior chest lead

if involve RV– need additional leads on right pericardium• Posterior wall infarction: no ST elevation or Q waves in

standard leads, ‘reciprocal’ changes (ST-segment depress), tall R wave V1-V4

Page 21: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

Transmural MI

1. Proximal occlusion of a major coronary artery; ST-segment elevation (or new BBB)

2. Diminution size of R wave

3. Transmural develop Q wave

4. T wave inverted; change in ventricular repolarisation

Page 22: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

Subendocardial MI

• Non ST-segment elevation

• Partial occlusion of a major vessel or complete occlusion of a minor vessel

• Unstable angina, subendothelial MI

• T wave inversion

• Loss of R wave

• Absence of Q wave

Page 23: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine
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MARKER ONSET PEAK DURATION NORMAL VALUE

CK-MB 3-6 hours 18-24 hours 36-72 hours 0-5.5 ng/mlTroponins 4-10 hours 18-24 hours 8-14 days 0-0.1 ng/mlMyoglobin 1-4 hours 6-7 hours 24 hours 10-95 ng/ml (M)

10-65 ng/ml (F)LDH 6-12 hours 24-72 hours 6-8 days 125-220 U/LAST 24-36 hours 4-5 days 10-12 days 10-45 U/L

Page 25: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT- FIRST 12 HOURS

•Analgesia

•Antithrombotic therapy

•Anti-angina therapy

•Reperfusion therapy

Page 26: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine
Page 27: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

COMPLICATIONS OF ACUTE CORONARY

SYNDROME• Arrhythmias• Ischemia• Acute circulatory failure• Pericarditis• Mechanical complication• Embolism• Impaired ventricular function, remodeling and ventricular aneurysm

Page 28: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

LATE MANAGEMENT IN MI•Risk stratification and further investigation•Lifestyle modification•Secondary prevention drug therapy•Rehabilitation•Device

Page 29: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

PROGNOSIS• ¼ cases, death within few minutes without medical care• ½ death within 24 hours of onset• 40% affected patients die within first month• Reach hospital & receive medication; 28-day survival >85%• Worse prognosis with anterior and inferior infarction• Who survive acute attack;>80% live a further year75% for 5 years50% for 10 years25% for 20 years

Page 30: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

CONCLUSION

Page 31: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

REFERENCES•BRIAN R. WALKER, NICKI R. COLLEDGE, STUART H. RALSTON, IAN D. PENMAN, Davidson’s Principles & Practice of Medicine, 22nd Edition

•MICHAEL GLYNN, WILLIAM DRAKE, Hutchinson’s Clinical Methods, 23rd Edition

Page 32: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), Medicine

THANK YOU