L22 Flashcards

1
Q

Define myocardial ischemia

A

O2 demand > O2 supply to heart muscle

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2
Q

Define myocardial infarction

A

Thrombosis due to rupture of atherosclerotic plaque

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3
Q

3 factors that determine heart O2 demand

A
  1. HR
  2. Contractility
  3. Wall tension - P and volume
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4
Q

Name the 6 steps of the ischemic cascade

A
  1. ↓O2 to heart muscle
  2. Switch to anaerobic metabolism
  3. Relaxation abnormalities - diastole
  4. Contraction abnormalities - systole
  5. ST changes to EKG
  6. Angina
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5
Q

Myocardial ischemia might present as angina. What are the 3 types of angina?

A
  1. Chronic, stable = angina pectoris
  2. Variant = prinzmetal’s
  3. Unstable (this is also under the umbrella of acute coronary syndrome)
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6
Q

Symptoms of stable angina

A

Visceral, deep pain
Self described around the sternum
“Elephant on my chest”

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7
Q

Provocation & palliation of stable angina

A

Onset: stress - physical or emotional

Relieved by stopping stress

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8
Q

Stable angina is usually due to…

A

Atherosclerosis

Existing block leads to less BF during activity –> stress induced pain

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9
Q

Remember the 6 risk factors for atherosclerosis

A
  1. High cholesterol
  2. HTN
  3. Smoking
  4. Diabetes
  5. Age
  6. Family history CHD
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10
Q

EKG for stable angina

A

ST depression when episodic

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11
Q

Describe variant angina

  • Presentation
  • EKG changes
A

Spontaneous chest pain - at rest

EKG = transient ST elevation

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12
Q

Cause variant angina + treat

A

Coronary artery spasm

Treat w/ nitrates or CaCBs

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13
Q

What are the 3 conditions under the umbrella term “acute coronary syndrome”?

A
= conditions that result of plaque rupture and some de
1. NSTEMI
2. STEMI
NSTEMI and STEMI are both types of MI
3. Unstable angina
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14
Q

What is STEMI

A

MI w/ ST elevation
Transmural infarct = through entire myocardial thickness
Usually result of complete occlusion of that area’s blood supply

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15
Q

What is NSTEMI

A

Non-ST elevated MI
May see ST depression
Subendocardial infarction = less invasive

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16
Q

Presentation of acute coronary syndromes

A
  1. Crushing chest pain at rest
  2. Gripping chest = Levine sign
  3. Sweating
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17
Q

What is a white thrombus? What kind of occlusion does it cause?

A

Platelet clot
Partially occlusive - b/c platelets, think soft!
Causes unstable angina or NSTEMI

18
Q

What is a red thrombus? What kind of occlusion does it cause?

A

Fibrin clot
Complete occlusion - big hard clot
Causes STEMI

19
Q

How do women present with MI?

A

Atypically:
Shoulder/neck pain
Dyspnea
Fatigue

20
Q

Tests to diagnose MI for pt presenting with chest pain

A
  1. Resting EKG - if clean get exercise EKG to bring out perfusion issues
  2. Troponin levels
    +/- Coronary arteriogram
21
Q

What EKG finding indicates prior MI?

A

Q wave
Dip before the QRS
= No electrical activity somewhere = dead tissue

22
Q

If you see a Q wave in leads 2, 3, avF - which coronary artery is affected?

A

RCA

23
Q

What are concerning findings for exercise test:

  • HR onset
  • Recovery: late vs early
  • ST changes?
  • Hypo or hypertension?
A
HIGH RISK RESULTS:
- Early onset bradycardia
- Late recovery - over 7 mins 
- ST depression
- Hypotension
Findings for AGGRESSIVE APPROACH
24
Q

What is a cold spot on myocardial perfusion tests? Findings for ischemic vs infarcted tissue?

A

Cold spot = not taking up radioisotope b/c no BF = ischemic area
Ischemic = transient cold spot
Infarcted tissue = fixed cold spot

25
Q

2 drugs for pharm stress test

A

Dobutamine - B1 agonist - increases contractility

Regadenoson = adenosine receptor agonist (duh!) = arteriolar dilation

26
Q

What are findings on echo for ischemia vs infarction?

A

Ischemia = transient abnormality
Infarction = fixed
Same as perfusion, different test

27
Q

Treat CAD

A
  1. Revascularize
    - PCI = angioplasty +/- stent
    - CABG
  2. Meds
    - Nitrates = vasodilators
    - BBs
    - Ca CBs
    GOALS reduce O2 consumption of myocardium
28
Q

Vessels that can be used for CABG

A

Saphenous vein graft

Internal mammary artery

29
Q

Describe nitrate mechanism

A

Dilation veins&raquo_space; arteries
Pool blood in circulation
Decrease preload

30
Q

Describe nitrate effects on heart

A

Vasodilate coronary arteries to increase subendocardial flow (to possibly ischemic areas)
Less wall tension/pressure because decrease preload
Net: increased HR and contractility

31
Q

SE nitrates

A

Headache - drop BF to brain as blood pools peripherally

Hypotension - SO much venous pooling

32
Q

Why do we give BB for MI?

A

Decreases mortaility

33
Q

Why do we give BB for angina pectoris?

A

↓HR and contractility

Net ↓O2 consumption

34
Q

Which BBs are cardio specific?

A
B1s 
A-M blockers aka B1s are the 1st 1/2 alphabet 
Acebutolol
Atenolol
Betaxolol
Carvedilol
Esmolol
Lavetalol
Metroprolol
35
Q

SEs BBs

A
Fatigue
HF
Excessive bradycardia
Worsen diabetic control
Bronchoconstriction
36
Q

Which type of angina are Ca CBs helpful with?

A

Variable

37
Q

Mechanism of CaCBs for ACS therapy

A

Both vasodilators
Non-DHPs - ↓HR
DHPs - ↓BP

38
Q

Most important CAD med

A

Aspirin

39
Q

Is immediate opening of the occlusion more significant for MIs w/ elevated or depressed ST segments?

A

STEMI

Indicates complete occlusion - get back profusion ASAP

40
Q

Should you give fibrinolytics or go to the cath lab?

A

Under 90 mins - cath lab

Otherwise fibrinolytics