MI Flashcards

1
Q

Myocardial infarction

A

Ischemia w/ injury or necrosis

Sx: (same as unstable angina)
CP – radiates to neck and left arm
Diaphoresis
Tachycardia
Dyspnea
Nausea
EKG changes
Elevated cardiac enzymes
-CK-MB, CK
-Troponin I
-myoglobin

Less than 20-40 min – reversible
>20-40 min – irreversible

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2
Q

Acute coronary syndrome (ACS)

A

Elevated cardiac enzymes:
STEMI
NSTEMI

Unstable angina

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3
Q

STEMI vs NSTEMI

A

STEMI:
ST elevations
CP w/ new LBBB
Change cardiac enzymes

NSTEMI:
No ST elevations
\+/- ST depression
\+/- T wave inversion
change cardiac enzymes
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4
Q

Non-MI causes of elevated cardiac enzymes

A

Heart failure
Rapid a-fib
Myocarditis
Sepsis

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5
Q

Serial cardiac enzymes

A

Troponin I – most specific to cardic m.
-rises after 4 hours, elevated for 1-2 wks

CK-MB – more specific to cardiac m.

CK – any m. damage

If negative, recheck in 3-6 hours

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6
Q

Order of most likely coronary arteries occluded to cause MI

A

MC: LAD -> anterior wall MI

2: right coronary a.
3: circumflex branch of LCA

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7
Q

Evolution of MI – first day

A

0-4 hours:
risk: arrhythmias

4-12 hours:
Gross: Dark mottling
Micro: Necrosis, hemorrhage
Risk: arrhythmias

12-24 hours:
Gross: dark mottling
Micro: contraction bands (reperfusion inj), coagulation necrosis (spills contents) -> neutrophil immigration
Risk: arrhythmias

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8
Q

Evolution of MI – 1-3 days

A

Gross: dark mottling, hyperemia (redness at infarct

Micro:
Coagulation necrosis
Extensive inflammation
Neutrophil infiltration

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9
Q

Evolution of MI 3-14 days

A

Gross: yellow-tan softening

Micro:
Macrophage infiltration -> remodel damaged area

Risk:
ventricular aneurysm
wall rupture -> cardiac tamponade
Papillary m. rupture

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10
Q

Evolution of MI over 2 weeks

A

Gross: gray-white scar

Micro:
Increased collagen deposition
Decreased cellularity

Risk:
Dressler Sn: pericarditis w/ persistent fever
Ventricular aneurysm – no muscle, scar tissue bulges w/ each contraction

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11
Q

ECG evolution of MI – acute, hours, day 1-2, days later, weeks later

A

Acute:
ST elevates – tombstoning
-Prinzmetal angina

Hours:
ST elevated
R wave decreases
Q wave appears

Day 1-2
T wave inverts
Q wave deepens

Days later
ST normal
T wave inverted

Weeks later
ST normal
T wave normal
Q wave persists

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12
Q

ECG changes w/ MI

A

Always compare to previous ECG

ST segment elevation of at least 1 mm in two contiguous leads

T wave inversion

New LBBB

New Q waves at least 1 block wide or 1/3 height of total QRS complex

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13
Q

Transmural vs subendocardial

A
Transmural:
Entire wall – endo/myocardium
Atherosclerosis of major coronary A.
Necrosis present
ST elevation -> Q wave

Subendocardial:
Less than 50% wall – endo/myocardium
Small areas of LV, ventricular septum, or papillary muscles
ST depression

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14
Q

MI complications

A

Cardiac arrhythmia – electroirritability of heart – N0 and M0
-Vfib most lethal

Ventricular failure and pulmonary edema

S4

Cardiogenic shock – LVF
-low BP

Ventricular free wall rupture

Cardiac tamponade

Papillary m. rupture – 5 d layter
-> severe mitral regurg

Intraventricular septal rupture -> VSD

Ventricular aneurysm – scar bulges w/ contraction

Embolism from mural thrombosis -> stroke
-tx warfarin and heparin

Fibrinous pericarditis – 3-5 days post

  • friction rub
  • lean forward improves sx

Dressler sn – autoimmune
-pericarditis weeks after MI

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15
Q

Left anterior descending a. on ECG

A

Anterior wall

V1-V4 (V5)
ST elevated or inverted T

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16
Q

Left circumflex a on ECG

A

Lateral wall

aVL, V5, V6

17
Q

Right coronary a. on ECG

A

Inferior wall
-II, III, aVF
– need right sided ECG, if V4 has ST elevation, posterior right ventricle also affected – give fluids and avoid nitroglycerin

Posterior wall
-right precordial ECG, V4 ST elevation

18
Q

Initial management of ACS (MI, unstable angina)

A

ABCs
MONA: IV morphine, O2 if hypoxemia only, nitroglycerin, aspirin

B-blocker – oral metoprolol if no HF or severe asthma

Statin – atorvastatin, preferably before PCI

Antiplatelet therapy to all – clopidogrel or ticagrelor
-in addition to aspirin

Anticoagulant

  • Unfractionated heparin to all PCI pts
  • Enoxaparin for non PCI pts (caution kidney clearance)

Maintain potassium above 4, magnesium above 2 to reduce risk of arrhythmias

19
Q

Treatment of STEMI

A

ACS tx +
PCI or if not available fibrinolysis w/in 90-120 min

Can give thrombolytics up to 12 hours after for MI

20
Q

Treatment of NSTEMI

A

ACS tx +
PCI
Avoid fibrinolysis!

21
Q

If pt becomes hypotensive w/ MI tx

A
Stop nitroglycerine (dilates veins)
IV fluids to fill space to get preload back
22
Q

Long term management post MI

A

Aspirin and/or clopidogrel

To reduce mortality:
B-blocker
ACEI/ARBs
Statins

Aldosterone Antagonist – spironolactone

Risk reduction:
-exercise, smoking cessation, diet modification