1 / 82

The diagnosis and treatment of acute coronary syndromes

The diagnosis and treatment of acute coronary syndromes. Radka Adlová. ACS - introduction. an umbrella term for any condition where the blood supplied to the heart muscle is reduced the most feared complications of coronary artery disease (CAD)

corneliusd
Download Presentation

The diagnosis and treatment of acute coronary syndromes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The diagnosis and treatment of acute coronary syndromes Radka Adlová

  2. ACS - introduction • an umbrella term for anyconditionwhere the blood supplied to the heart muscle isreduced • themost fearedcomplications of coronaryarterydisease (CAD) • are associatedwithhigh mortality and morbidity • Cardiovasculardiseases (CVD) - presently theleadingcausesofdeath in industrializedcountries • Coronary arterydisease is the cause of 13% of deaths worldwide, every sixthman and every seventh woman in Europe die becauseof acute myocardialinfarction (AMI)

  3. Cardiovascular Mortality

  4. Definiton The clinical presentations of CAD include: • silent ischaemia • stable angina pectoris • heart failure • unstable angina • myocardial infarction (MI) • sudden death

  5. Acute coronary syndromes ACS are usually divided into: • Unstable angina - only ischemia, lack of necrosis • STEMI - ST - elevation MI • NSTEMI - non-ST elevation MI • Sudden death - due to cardiac arrhythmias

  6. Acute coronary syndromes

  7. Definition • ST-elevation ACS (STE-ACS): • typical acute chest pain and persistent (>20 min) • ST-segment elevation • generally reflects an acute total coronary occlusion • most will ultimately develop an ST-elevation MI (STEMI).

  8. ST elevation on the ECG

  9. Definition • non-STE-ACS (NSTE-ACS): • acute chest pain • without persistent ST-segment elevation • persistent or transient ST segment depression or T-wave inversion • further qualified into non-ST elevation MI (NSTEMI) or unstable angina.

  10. ST depresion on the ECG

  11. Pathophysiology of ACS Atherothrombosis • Atherosclerosis - a fixed and barely reversible process of gradual luminal narrowing (slowly over decades) • Thrombosis - a dynamic and potentially reversible process causing rapid complete or partial occlusion of the coronary artery

  12. Vulnerable plaque • a large lipid core • a low density of smooth muscle cells • a high concentration of inflammatory cells • a thin fibrous cap covering the lipid core • acute thrombosis induced by a plaque rupture

  13. Vulnerable plaque

  14. Vulnerable plaque Hamm, Cardiovascular Medicine 2006

  15. Vulnerable patient • Multiple sites of plaque rupture with or without intracoronary thrombosis • Elevated levels of various systemic markers of inflammation, thrombosis and coagulation system activation • Hypercholesterolaemia • Tobacco smoking

  16. Epidemiology • The annual incidence of NSTE-ACS is higher than STEMI • The annual incidence of hospital admissions for NSTE-ACS is in the range of 3 per 1000 inhabitants • sex differences - men account for more than 90% of patients with AMI at the age under 40y. (a hormonalprofile of woman has a protective effect) • age differences - in patients aged under 40y. only one heart artery is affected

  17. History of STE-ACS • overall case fatality: - about half of the deaths caused by acute coronary syndromes occur during the first two hours - no change at present time • in-hospital mortality: - prior to the introduction of coronary care units in the 1960s - 25 - 30% - pre-reperfusion era of the mid-1980s - 16% - at present ~ 10%

  18. Prognosis of STE vs. NSTE-ACS Hospital mortality - higher in patients with STEMI than among those with NSTE-ACS (7 vs. 5%) 6 months mortality - the mortality rates are very similar in both conditions (12 vs. 13%) Long-term follow-up - death rates higher among those with NSTE-ACS than with STE-ACS

  19. Prognosis of STE vs. NSTE-ACS The causes of the higher death rates of NSTE-ACS than of STE-ACS pts. during long-term follow-up are: • older pts. • more co-morbidities (diabetes and renal failure). • a greater extent of coronary artery and vascular diseases • persistent triggering factors such as inflammation

  20. Classification of MI • Type 1 – spontaneous MI related to ischemia due to a primary coronary event such as plaque erosion and/or rupture, fissuring, ordissection • Type 2 – MI secondary to ischemia due to either increased oxygen demand or decreased supply, e.g. coronary artery spasm, coronary embolism, anemia, arrhythmias, hypertension, or hypotension • Type 3 – sudden unexpected cardiac death, including cardiac arrest but death occurring before blood samples could be obtained • Type 4 – associated with PCI: • Type 4a – MI associated with theprocedureof PCI • Type 4b – MI associated with stent thrombosis • Type 5 – MI associated with CABG

  21. Myocardial infarction 1. Atherosclerotic aetiology (type 1) 2. Non-atherosclerotic aetiology: (type 2-5) • arteritis • trauma • dissection • congenital anomalies • cocaine abuse • complications of cardiac catheterization, CABG

  22. Diagnosis of acute MI 2 from 3 criteraiamustbefulfilled : • Clinicalsymtoms • Chestpain • ECG changes • ST elevationordepression • negative T wave • Elevatedcardiacbiomarkers • Troponin I or T • CK-MB • myoglobin

  23. Diagnosis of ACS • Clinical presentation • History of patient • Physical examination • Electrocardiogram • Biochemical markers - troponin • Non-invasive imaging - Echo • Imaging of coronary arteries - coronary angiography

  24. Clinical presentation STE/NSTE-ACS: • Intense prolonged (20 min) painat rest - retrosternalpressureorheaviness (‘angina’) radiatingup to theneck, shoulderand jaw anddown to theulnar aspekt oftheleftarm • May beaccompanied by othersymptoms such as diaphoresis, nausea, abdominalpain, dyspnoea,… Unstableangina: • New onset severe angina (class III of CCS) • Recentdestabilizationofpreviouslystableanginawith atleast CCS III anginacharacteristics (crescendo angina) • Post-MI angina.

  25. Clinical presentation 1) Typical chest pain 2) Nauzea 3) Sweating

  26. Clinical presentation Atypicalpresentationsarenot uncommon • epigastricpain • recent-onsetindigestion • stabbingchestpain • chestpainwithsomepleuriticfeatures • increasingdyspnoea - oftencanbeobserved in younger (25-40y.), older (75y.), in women, in pts. with diabetes, chronicrenalfailure, ordementia.

  27. Clinical presentation • The presence oftachycardia, hypotension, orheartfailureneeds rapid diagnosisand management, oftenindicating a poorprognosisofthispatientwith ACS • Itisimportant to identifytheclinicalcircumstances such as anaemia, infection, inflammation, fever, andmetabolicorendocrine (in particularthyroid) disorders (mayexacerbateorprecipitate ACS)

  28. Physical examination • Frequently normal • Signs of heart failure or haemodynamic instability • Dif. dg.: -nonischaemic cardiac disorders: pulmonary embolism, aortic dissection, pericarditis, valvular heart disease) - extra-cardiac causes: pulmonary diseases - pneumothorax, pneumonia, pleural effusion)

  29. Physical examination • Heart failure • Tachycardia, tachypnoe • Pulmonary rales (pulmonary congestion) • RV failure - ↑ jugular congestion, hepatomegaly • Hypotension ↓ 100/60 mmhg • cardiac shock (tachycardia) • ↑ vagal nerve activity (bradycardia - inferior IM) • Bradycardia • AV block • Inferior IM - non-serious, frequent • Anterior IM - serious, rare

  30. Electrocardiogram • The resting 12-lead ECG is the first-line diagnostic tool in the assessment of patients with suspected ACS. • STE-ACS… ST-elevation • NSTE-ACS…ST-segment shifts and T-wave changes • A completely normal ECG does not exclude the possibility of ACS.

  31. Location of MI

  32. Location of MI ST elevation only: • Anteroseptal - V1-V3 • Anterolateral - V1-V6 • Inferior wall - II, III, aVF • Lateral wall - I, aVL, V4-V6 • Right ventricular - RV4, RV5 • Posterior- R/S ratio >1 in V1 and T wave inversion

  33. Location of MI

  34. Location of MI

  35. Location of MI

  36. Biochemical markers Markers of myocardial injury: • cardiac troponins (I and T) • creatinine kinase (CK) • CK isoenzyme MB (CK-MB) • Myoglobin • repeated blood sampling and measurements are required 6–12 h after admission and after any further episodes of severe chest pain

  37. Biochemical markers in ACS

  38. Biochemical markers Non-coronary condition with Troponin elevation • Severe congestive heart failure • Aortic dissection, valve disease • Myocarditis • Hypertrophic CMP, Stress CMP • Hypertesive crisis • Acute and chronic renal failure • Acute neurological disease • …

  39. Other biomarkers • C-reactive protein - inflamation • long-term prognosis • Natriuretic peptides - heart failure • shor-term prognosis • Serum creatinine - renal function • Short and long-term prognosis No role for the diagnosis of ACS, but effect on short- or long-term prognosis and dif. Dg.

  40. Non-invasive myocardial imaging • Echocardiography - to evaluate LV systolic function, aortic stenosis, aortic dissection, pulmonary embolism, or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy - should be routinely used in emergency units for the risc stratification • Stress echocardiography, stress scintigraphy- evidence of ischaemia or myocardial viability (in stabilized patients)

  41. Imaging of the coronary anatomy • The imaging of the coronary anatomy is the most importat diagnostics method in evaluation of acute coronary syndrome • The gold standard of patients with ACS is conventional invasive coronary angiography

  42. Decesion-making algorithm in ACS

  43. Treatment of MI • while STEMIis an urgent situation with turbulentsymptomatology,NSTEMI may have symptomsmuch milder and above its immediateprognosis is better • Pts. should stay on coronary care unit - 2-3 days, than standard cardiology department • the total length of hospitalization is around1 week • even after leaving the CCU patients are able to move around the room and in the following daysrehabilitate and before discharge they are able to walk up the stairs • return to job possible approximately one month after the onset of the symptoms

  44. Treatment of STEMI • Open theoccludedartery as soon as possibleto restorebloodflowfortheheart ‘‘Timeismuscle“ • Checkforcomplicationofmyocardialinfarctionandtreatthem: • arrhythmia • heartfailure • bleeding

More Related