Angina, myocardial ischaemia + infarction Flashcards

(26 cards)

1
Q

what is angina due to and what does it present as

A

myocardial ischaemia, central chest tightness radiates to one or both arms, jaw, neck, teeth

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2
Q

cause of angina

A

atheroma (rare- anaemia, AS, tachyarrythmia, HCM, arteritis)

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3
Q

associated symptoms of angina

A

dyspnoea, nausea, sweatiness, faintness

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4
Q

types of angina

A

stable( induced by effort relieved by rest), unstable (increasing freq/severity, min exertion), Decubitus (lying flat), variant/Prinzmetals (coronary artery spasm)

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5
Q

tests for angina

A

ECG can show ST depression, flat/inverted T wave

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6
Q

what drugs can be used to treat angina

A

aspirin, B blockers, nitrates (GTN spray), long acting calcium antagonists (amlodipine, diltiazem), K channel activator

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7
Q

what is PTCA (for angina)

A

percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty- balloon dilatation of stenotic vessels.

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8
Q

complications of PTCA

A

restenosis, emergency CABG

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9
Q

What is ACS

A

acute coronary syndrome- unstable angina, evolving MI

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10
Q

what is the pathophysiology of ACS

A

plaque rupture, thrombosis, inflammation. rarely emboli or spasm in normal coronary arteries

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11
Q

what is acute MI defined as

A

ACS with ST elevation or new onset LBBB. increase then decrease in biomarkers, pathological Q waves, loss of myocardium on imaging

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12
Q

risk factors of ACS

A

age, male, Fhx, smoking, hypertension, DM, hyperlipidaemia, obesity

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13
Q

symptoms ACS

A

acute central chest pain lasting >20 mins, nausea, sweatiness, dyspnoea, palps, syncope, Pulm oedema

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14
Q

signs ACS

A

anxiety, pallor, sweaty, tachy or bradyc, hyper/hypotension, 4th heart sound. signs of heart failure: incr JVP, 3rd heart sound, basal creps, pansystolic murmur.

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15
Q

tests for ACS: ECG

A

tall T wave, ST elevation, new onset LBBB, T wave inversion, pathological Q waves

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16
Q

tests for ACS: CXR

A

cardiomegaly, pulm oedema, widened mediastinum

17
Q

tests for ACS: blood and cardiac enzymes.

A

FBC, U&Es, glucose, lipids. cardiac troponin incr 3-12hr from onset pain; peak 24-48hr, decr to baseline 5-14 days. creatinine kinase- CK-MM, CK-MB, CK-BB. Myoglobin- highly sensitive not specific

18
Q

differential diagnosis of ACS

A

angina, pericarditis, myocarditis, aortic dissection, PE, reflux

19
Q

management ACS: emergency

A

aspirin 300mg chewed, GTN sublingual. analgesia and metoclopramide. in hosp: O2, IVI, morphine, aspirin

20
Q

management ACS: with ST elevation

A

primary angioplasty/thrombolysis; B blocker (atenolol 5mg); ACE-I (lisinopril 2.5mg); clopidogrel 300mg loading followed by 75mg/day for 30 days

21
Q

management ACS: without ST elevation

A

B blocker; antithrombitic/LMWH; assess risk GRACE score; high risk- GPIIb/IIIa, clopidogrel; low risk- clopidogrel.

22
Q

management ACS: subsequent management

A

bed rest; daily exam; prophylaxis against thromboembolism; aspirin; B blockers; ACE-I; statin

23
Q

complications of MI

A

cardiac arrest, cardiogenic shock, unstable angina, brady or heart block, tacyarrhythmias, RVF, pericarditis, DVT/PE, systemic embolism, cardiac tamponade, MR, ventricular septal defect, Dresslers, LV aneurysm

24
Q

what is Dresslers syndrome

A

2-5 weeks post MI. pleuritic chest pain, low grade fever, pericarditis, pericardial effusion.

25
how to treat Dresslers
treat with aspirin, NSAIDS, steroids
26
if suspect MI how do you treat this
MONA- Morphine, O2, Nitric oxide (GTN), aspirin (300mg chew)