acute coronary syndrome jarrod d. frizzell, md, ms fellow, cardiovascular medicine july 10, 2014

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ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

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Page 1: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROMEJarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS

Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine

July 10, 2014

Page 2: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

A Case• 37yoM awoke with chest pressure

• Radiating to left shoulder • Still present after 1h.• Tachy, “JVD to ears”, lungs clear

• Just diagnosed with DM last night• iStat Tn: 0

Page 3: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014
Page 4: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014
Page 5: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014
Page 6: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Outline• Definitions

• ACS• MI

• STEMI• NSTEMI• UA• Pearls

Page 7: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Acute Coronary Syndrome

Page 8: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Acute Coronary Syndrome

Page 9: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Acute Coronary Syndrome• Syndrome

• Chest pain (angina?)• Most common: upper body discomfort & SOB

• Diaphoresis• Nausea/vomiting• Dizziness

• Isolated atypical sx are uncommon (women, elderly, DM)

• Entire picture must be set in clinical context • ECG or isolated Tn alone does not make it

Page 10: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Acute Coronary Syndrome

Goldacre, Acad Emer Med 2003

Page 11: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Acute Coronary Syndrome• ACS typically implies “type I event”• Divided into:

• STEMI• NSTEMI• UA

Page 12: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Braunwald, AJRCCM 2012

Page 13: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Types of MI

Page 14: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Universal Definition of MI• Detection of rise and/or fall of cardiac biomarkers with at

least 1 value above the 99th %ile reference limit and with at least 1 of the following • Sx of ischemia• New or presumed new significant ST-T changes or LBBB• Development of pathologic Q waves• Imaging evidence of new loss of viable myocardium or new WMA• Identification of an intracoronary thrombus (cath or autopsy)

Circulation 2012

Page 15: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Features

Braunwald, 9th ed.

Page 16: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ECG

Page 17: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

STEMI• ST elevations—measured at the J point

• V2-V3—age/gender dependent• Women: 1.5mm• Men ≥40: 2mm• Men <40: 2.5mm

• 1mm in all other leads

• “Injury pattern”

Page 18: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

STEMI

ECG.utah.edu

Page 19: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

STE

Ecginterpretation.blogspot.com

Page 20: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ECG

Page 21: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ECG

Page 22: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ECG

Page 23: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ECG

Page 24: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

ECG• STEMI vs everything else• Why?

• Very specific for transmural ischemia (diagnosis & location)• “Time is muscle”

Page 25: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

THE Graph

Gersh, JAMA 2005

Page 26: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

2013 STEMI Guidelines

Page 27: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

2013 STEMI Guidelines

Page 28: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

STEMI• Meds—Before Cath

• Anti-platelet load• ASA • Thienopyridine (clopidogrel)

• Anticoagulation• Heparin/LMWH• Bivalirudin (if PCI—started in cath lab)• Not fonda • IIb/IIIa fallen out of favor except special circumstances

• Pain relief• NTG• Morphine?• If need beyond, call fellow (for boards: CCB, BB)

Page 29: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Back to ACS

Page 30: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

NSTEMI• Still presentation of ACS, but not STE• Elevated Tn• TIMI Score

Page 31: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Braunwald, AJRCCM 2012

Page 32: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

NSTEMI

Page 33: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

NSTEMI• If low risk, probably go with noninvasive imaging

• Dob echo• Dipy/cardiolite

• Initial meds overall similar to STEMI• ASA/clopidogrel• Heparin/LMWH

• Time is less pressing• Urgent (<120min)• Early invasive (<72h)• Conservative (not cath)

Page 34: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Unstable Angina• Definition

• CP that occurs at rest or with minimal exertion, lasts >20min• Onset within past month• Crescendo pattern

• A dying breed?• Broadly speaking, treat like NSTEMI

Page 35: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

“Routine Medical Therapy”• Within 24h:

• Beta-blocker• ACEI• High-intensity statin

• Also get TTE

Page 36: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

When to call?• Whenever you feel uncomfortable

• Not the resident’s job to “rule out STEMI” on ECG• You will only regret not calling

• If cannot get CP-free

Page 37: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Miscellany• Elevated Tn—when to heparinize?• DAPT—duration

• DES: 1y• BMS: at least 1mo, up to 1y• ACS but no intervention—1 year

• “No breakfast on 7S” (NPO for tests)• “No coffee at the VA” (NPO for nuc, caffeine interferes)

Page 38: ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Jarrod D. Frizzell, MD, MS Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine July 10, 2014

Boards Odds & Ends• RV Infarct

• Inferior STE (get right-sided ECG)• +JVD but clear lungs • (Borderline) Hypotensive fluids• Avoid NTG

• STEMI is not only cause of STE• If STEMI at non-PCI OSH:

• Transfer if PCI within 120min• Lytics if transfer outside window

• Idioventricular rhythm post reperfusion• Looks like VT, but slower• No additional therapy