evaluation of chest pain in primary care

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Evaluation of chest pain in primary care Shaival J Kapadia, MD FACC Bon Secours Heart and Vascular Institute

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Page 1: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Shaival J Kapadia, MD FACCBon Secours Heart and Vascular

Institute

Page 2: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

A careful history will lead to the…

diagnosis 80% of the time

Page 3: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Medicine is the science of uncertainty and the art of probability

Sir William Osler

Page 4: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Chronic recurrent chest pain

High suspicion for ACS or unstable angina – then ED

Page 5: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Epidemiology of chest pain

• Prevalence varies with population

• Chest pain is the chief complaint in about 1-2% of outpatient visits

• Cause predominantly noncardiac BUT heart disease remains leading cause of death in the US– Musculoskeletal chest pain 36% (costochondritis 13%)– GERD 13%– Angina responsible for 11%, unstable angina or MI only

1.5%– 15% never reach a definitive diagnosis

Page 6: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Origin of chest pain – difficult?

• Various disease processes in variety of organs

• Severity of pain does not correlate with life threatening potential

• Location of pain often does not correspond with source

• More than one disease process may be present

Page 7: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

ECG

• Low sensitivity for coronary ischemia

• Only 50% with proven MI have positive initial ECG

• Up to 76% of ACS – normal or nonspecific initial ECG

Page 8: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Cardiovascular Causes

• Ischemic syndromes– ACS– Stable angina– Coronary vasospasm

• Nonischemic syndromes– Aortic dissection– Pericarditis– Myocarditis– Stress induced cardiomyopathy

Page 9: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Chest wall

• Costochondritis– Costovertebral joint dysfunction– Sternalis syndrome– Xiphoidalgia

• Rheumatic diseases• Stress fractures• Metastatic malignancy• Acute chest syndrome (sickle cell crisis)• Herpes zoster (shingles)

Page 10: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Gastrointestinal

• Esophageal– Reflux– Rupture– Spasm– Espophagitis

• Pancreatobiliary– Pancreatitis– Cholecystitis/biliary colic

• PUD

Page 11: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Pulmonary

• Vasculature– Acute pulmonary embolism– Pulmonary hypertension

• Parenchyma– Pneumonia– Cancer

• Airways– Asthma/COPD

• Pleura– Pleuritis– Pneumothorax

Page 12: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Psychiatric

• Anxiety• Depression• Panic attacks• Munchausen

Page 13: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

The History

• Quality of pain

• Region or location

• Radiation

• Temporal elements

• Provocation

• Palliation

• Severity

Page 14: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Associated sign and symptoms

• Diaphoresis

• Dyspnea

• Cough

• Syncope

• Palpitations

• Psychiatric symptoms

• Constitutional symptoms

Page 15: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

True Diagnosis: “Gold Standard”

a

True positive

D

True negative

C

False negative

B

False positive

Disease present Disease absent

a + b

c + d

b + da + c

Positive

Negative

Sensitivity = a / (a + c)Specificity = d / (b = d)

Positive predictive value = a / (a + b)Negative predictive value = d/ (c + d)

Positive likelihood ratio =a / (a + c)b / (b + d)

Negative likelihood ratio = c / (a + c)d / (b + d)

Page 16: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Likelihood Ratios & Bayes Nomogram

Likelihood ratios (LR) and Bayes’ Nomograms are a useful way of expressing the power of diagnostic tests in increasing or decreasing the likelihood of disease

Characteristics of Chest Pain and the Probability of Cardiac DiseaseCharacteristic Likelihood

RatioChest pain radiating to left 2.0

Chest pain radiating to right 3.0

Chest pain radiating to both 7.0

Pressure, squeezing, aching <2.0

Pleuritic, sharp, stabbing, positional, reproducible pain on palpitation

0.2-0.4

Normal ECG 0.1-0.3

Hypotension 3.0

Presence of 3rd heart sound 3.2

New ST – T elevations 5.7-53.9

Nausea, vomiting, diaphoresis 2.0

Page 17: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Bayes Nomogram

Two methods of estimating the pre-test probability:

• Emergency gut feeling (educated guess) after the history and examination

• Clinical decision rules

Page 18: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Rouan Decision Rule for Myocardial

Infarction• The Rouan Decisoin Rule

reliably predicts which patients with chest pain & a normal or nonspecific ECG are at higher risk for MI

• However, 3% of patients initially diagnosed with a non-cardiac cause of chest pain suffer death or MI within 30 days of presentation

• Patients with cardiac risk factors warrant close follow-up

Clinical Characteristics

Age greater than 60 years

Diaphoresis

History of MI or angina

Male sex

Pain described as pressure

Pain radiating to arm, shoulder, neck or jaw

Score* Risk of MI (%)

0 Up to 0.6

1 Up to 3.4

2 Up to 4.8

3 Up to 12.0

4 Up to 26.0

• One point for each clinical characteristic• NOTE: At no level of risk can MI be completely ruled

out

Page 19: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Summary

• Although diagnostic tests are impressive, they should NOT replace the history and physical examination (H&P)

• Clinical decision rules provide pre-test probability of a disease

• And coupled with H&P drive appropriate testing

Page 20: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

What type of stress test should I request?

Dr. Jun Chung

Page 21: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Types of stress test commonly available

Regular – exercise stress – pharmacologic

Stress echo – exercise stress– dobutamine

Stress nuclear– exercise stress– dobutamine – vasodilator

Page 22: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Question #1 : can they exercise

Recommendation

• If patient can exercise and ECG is interpretable, proceed to regular stress test

• If the patient cannot exercise, or ECG is uninterpretable, proceed to imaging stress test

• Often, insurance payors are reluctant to approve imaging stress test as initial test.

Page 23: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Caveat for regular stress test

• Sensitivity 68%, Specificity 77%: Meta-analysis of 147 studies

• Sensitivity 50%, Specificity 90% when corrected for workup bias

• Easy test for young healthy active individuals?

Page 24: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

ECG uninterpretable? …proceed to imaging stress test

• ST or T wave abnormality on rest ECG

• LBBB

• Ventricular paced complexes

• Chronotropic incompetence

• Borderline include LVH and RBBB

Page 25: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Uninterpretable ECG

Imaging stress test needed• Exercise stress echo or pharmacologic stress echo

– if reasonably good images obtainable based on body habitus

– Pharmacologic option for stress echo is dobutamine

• Exercise stress nuclear or pharmacologic stress nuclear– Dependent on body habitus– Pharmocologic options include dobutamine and

vasodilator

Page 26: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

With uninterpretable ECG in a patient who can exercise…

• Would typically recommend exercise stress echo or nuclear scan over pharmacologic test

Page 27: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

If Patient Cannot Exercise

Pharmacologic Options• Pharmacologic echo utilizes dobutamine with

atropine

• Pharmacologic nuclear scan – LBBB, PPM, HTN – Vasodilator – Preferred option– Dobutamine/atropine – only necessary if patient is on

actively wheezing or on methylxanthines*

*If methylxanthines can be be temporarily withdrawn for 72 hours, then would proceed with vasodilator stress

Page 28: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Pharmacology

• Dobutamine: structural similarities to endogenous catecholamines, norepinephrine or epinephrine– Mechanism of action: beta1 stimulation (less alpha1 and

beta2)– Increase chronotropic and inotropic action– Contraindicated with LBBB, ppm,^HR, ^BP

• Atropine • Vasodilators: dipyridamole, adenosine,

regadenoson– Can use in stable COPD w/o active wheezing– Cannot use with active wheezing or methylxanthines

(aminophylline, theophylline, caffeine)

Page 29: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Pros and Cons of Echo and Nuclear

• Echo: – No radiation– No need for expensive equipment– More info than just ischemia, such as pulmonary

pressure change and valve abnormality– Easier to get pre-authorization– Reader dependent?

• Nuclear scan:– Objective, less reader dependent?– Fewer false positives in females– Radiation – Expensive equipment

Page 30: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

Chest Pain evaluation after EKG

Stable?Definitive procedure

Can Exercise?

YesNo

Abnormal EKG Normal EKG

Stress Echo

DobutamineStress Echo

Pharm. Nuclear

Stress Nuclear

DobutamineNuclear

Vasodilator**Nuclear

Yes

No

• Pt. with active wheezing

• Pt. taking methylxanthnes*

• LBBB• PPM• HTN• Without

wheezing

If pt. is unable to achieve target HR, test can be easily switched to pharmacologic

If pt. is unable to achieve target HR, test can be changed to Dobutamine if nurse available

Reg. Exercise Stress

Echo vs. Nuclear• Echo favored: if experienced tech and reader,

readily available, no need to wait for dose, no radiation, suspect valvular disease, need pulmonary pressure, less expensive, easier to get prior auth.

• Nuclear favored: more uniform, less subjective, fewer false positives in females, morbidly obese

• Methylxanthines-aminophylline, theophylline, caffeine• Vasodilator-dipyridamole, adenosine, regadenoson (Lexiscan)

If patient has LBBB, PPM or uncontrolled HTN recommend vasodilator nuclear

Page 31: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

#1

• 27yo teacher with exertional chest pains, and family history of CAD

• Normal exam • Normal ECG

Page 32: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

#2

• 64yo health club owner with exertional chest pains, tobacco use, HTN and family history

• Normal exam • Normal ECG

Page 33: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

#3

• 57yo MD with new onset exertional chest pains. No risk factors.

• Normal exam• Chronic LBBB

Page 34: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

#4

• 48yo shipyard worker with exertional chest pain, obese, tobacco, hypertension and hyperlipidemia

• Normal exam• LVH

Page 35: Evaluation of chest pain in primary care

#5

• 72yo farmer with exertional chest pains. COPD, current tobacco, HTN, hyperlipidemia

• Active wheezes• Barrel chested• RBBB