Chest Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the phases of the cardiac cycle.

A

Starts in diastole (non-contracted) with cardiac chamber filling, systole begins with the S1 sound of the atrioventricular valves closing, the blood rushes through the open pulmonary and aortic valves and the heart contracts. As the contraction finishes the aortic and pulmonary valves close making the S2 sound and starting diastole once more.

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2
Q

What factors effect cardiac output?

A

CO = Heart Rate x Stroke Volume

The factors that effect HR:

  • Autonomic system
  • Hormones
  • Fitness
  • Age

The factors that effect SV:

  • Heart size
  • Fitness
  • Sex
  • Contractility
  • Preload (increases)
  • Afterload (decreases)
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3
Q

Features of cardiac originating chest pain?

A

Non-pleuritic, retrosternal, radiating, crushing pressure, triggered by activity, associated SOB and diaphoresis/ GI symptoms

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4
Q

What do S3 and S4 heart sounds indicate?

A

S3: ventricular gallop - the sound of blood hitting an overly compliant ventricle during passive filling. Cardiac myopathy. Can be a normal in young adults and children. Occurs just after S2.

S4: atrial gallop - the sound blood striking a non-compliant ventricle. Cardiac hypertrophy. Occurs just before S1.

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5
Q

Describe the murmur produced by mitral stenosis.

A

Low pitched, rumbling, best heard at the apex of the heart, diastolic, decrescendo-crescendo

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6
Q

Describe the murmur produced by mitral regurgitation

A

Pan-systolic, at apex, in lateral decubitus, high-pitched or blowing.

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7
Q

Describe the murmur produced by aortic stenosis.

A

Mid-systolic, high-pitched, best heard at pulmonic valve location, may radiate throughout, especially bilaterally to the carotids, crescendo-decrescendo

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8
Q

Describe the murmur produced by aortic regurgitation

A

Decrescendo, blowing, diastolic, at pulmonic valve location.

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9
Q

Pulmonary findings in CHF?

A

May find orthopnea, PND, SOB
This can be secondary to fluid back-up into the lungs, most prominent in left sided heart
CXR:
Kerley lines - interstitial edema
- Fuzzy full hilum, basal congestion - Pleural effusions
Bilateral fluffy infiltrates, alveolar- pulmonary edema

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10
Q

Name testing options for cardiac pathology

A
ECG 
Holter/Telemetry 
Echocardiogram (stress is an option too) 
Exercise/ Persantine stress test (MIBI
MUGA 
Angiogram
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11
Q

What are the risks of an angiogram?

A

Bleeding, MI, arrhythmia, stroke, allergic reaction to dye

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12
Q

What anatomical mechanism causes wheezing?

A

Inspiratory wheeze - obstruction of the airways (very concerning)
Expiratory wheeze - premature collapsing airway

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13
Q

Tx for DVT/PE?

A

Give DOAC or LMWH bridge to warfarin for 3-6 months, need to check the kidney function for DOAC.

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14
Q

Critical steps for treatment of ACS?

A

Morphine - for pain control
O2 - if less than 88
Nitro - need to make sure not right sided, not on cAMP inhibitors, pressures ok
Aspirin - 325mg dose

Beta blocker - for less heart strain 
ACE - long term 
Statin - long term 
Heparin 
Clopidogrel

If can be done in less than 90 minute PCI, if more than that consider tPA - (no hemorrhagic stroke, no active malignancy intercranial, no ishemic in 3 months, no significant head trauma, no active aortic bleed/ major bleed) ideally BP controlled,

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15
Q

Chest pain DDx?

A

Bullet approach: Imagine a bullet passing through the chest, as it hits each structure think of the pathologies

Skin, muscle, bone/cartilage, lungs, heart, vessels, esophagus, spine

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16
Q

Cardiac risk factors

A

Age, smoking, sex, diabetes, Fhx, dyslipidemia, HTN, previous cardiac HI, certain cardiotoxic medications, obesity, ethnicity, inflammatory disorders

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17
Q

What should be done to screen for ACS

A

Monitor BP/ vitals , Hx for red flags, ECG, trops, Tele/monitor, consider bedside US, CXR.

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18
Q

What increases cardiac demand

A

Exercise, stress, pain, cardiomyopathy/ damage.

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19
Q

How might women present with MI?

A

Fatigue, lightheadedness, GI symptoms, arm pain

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20
Q

Becks triad?

A

Cardiac tamponade - muffled heart sounds, hypotension, distended neck veins

21
Q

ST elevation in ECG leads and effected artery for anterior MI

A

Elevation in V1-4, LCA/LAD

22
Q

ST elevation in ECG leads and artery for inferior MI

A

II, III, AVF - RCA

23
Q

ST elevation on ECG leads and artery for lateral?

A

I, aVL, V5-V6, circumflex

24
Q

ST elevation on ECG leads and artery for posterior MI

A

V7-V9 - look for reciprocal depression in the anterior leads

25
Q

No nitro in MI if?

A

Right sided (Inferior) because the supply to the heart is pre-load dependant

26
Q

Contraindications to tPA?

A

Active bleeding, malignancy, stroke in last 3 months, trauma, aneurysm or previous inter-cranial hemorrhage

27
Q

Short PR interval?

A

WPW - delta waves - look for these as well - this is the most common. Risk of arrhythmia

28
Q

First degree heart block - PR interval?

A

Lengthened. But still sinus. Be careful with CCB and BB

29
Q

PR interval normal length?

A

0.12-0.20

30
Q

QRS interval normal?

A

Between 0.08 and 0.10

31
Q

Types of wide complex QRS?

A

Anything from the ventricle - 3rd degree heart block, VTach, PVC, hyperkalemia (imagine pulling on the baseline in two directions), pacemaker - look for a p-wave this helps eliminate any of the ventricle rhythm.

32
Q

QT interval - corrected

A

From the start of the Q wave to the end of T, compare to RR interval - should be less than half of the RR - need to have a normal HR to do this.

33
Q

Q waves?

A

Signs of old ischemia

34
Q

What is normal QTc

A

400-450 ms - age and gender dependant - get worried around 500

35
Q

What prolongs QT

A

Low Ca, Mg, K, anti-psychotics, methadone, SSRIs (some), TCAs, macrolide - azithromycin, fluoroquinolone, ondansatron, metoclopromide

36
Q

Signs of ischemia

A

Peaked t’s, ST depression or elevation, Q-waves, LBBB, dynamic ECG, inverted Ts

37
Q

RBBB ECG signs?

A

MORROW
V1 V6

With discordant T (opposite direction from the majority of the QRS.

38
Q

LBBB ECG

A

WILLIAM
V1. V6

With discordant T waves

39
Q

LBBB but also a MI?

A

Sgarbossa criteria

40
Q

Wellen’s criteria

A

Test for ischemia - deeply inverted T wave in V3/4, biphasic T waves - sign of critical proximal LAD occlusion

41
Q

Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia on ECG

A

Irregularly irregular - wandering SA node, Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia- seen in COPD - correct the COPD do not need to anti-coagulate

42
Q

When do you need an anticoagulant for AF

A

If rhythm is persistent - over 48 hours need it

43
Q

Angina - will there be elevated trops?

A

Nope.

44
Q

Sx with the highest LR for cardiac chest pain?

A

Radiation of pain to both arms

45
Q

Main initial goal in controlling a.fib?

A

Control ventricular rate - can use CCB, beta blockers

Then worry about anticoagulation

And if unstable consider cardioversion

46
Q

How much time does the little square on the ECG represent?

A

0.04 secs

47
Q

Approach to ECG interpretation

A
Rate
Rhythm 
Axis
Intervals 
Segments 
Ischemic 
Hypertrophy
Conduction
48
Q

ECG findings in PE?

A

Most commonly - sinus tachycardia or a.fib/flutter

Classic - S1Q3T3 ( S wave in lead 1 and a Q wave and inverted T in lead 3)