Acute Coronary Syndrome
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Atherothombosis
Acute thrombosis occuring in the presence of pre-existing atherosclerosis producing acute ischemic strokes, acute ischemic syndromes of peripheral arteries and acute coronary syndrome including unstable angina, myocardial infarction (NSTEMI and STEMI) and sudden death.
Milagros Estrada-Yamamoto,MD
Endocrine (DM)
Toxic (nicotine)
Hyperlipidemia
Mechanical (HPN)
Genetic
Combination of Factors
Functional Impairment of Endothelium Increased LDL or other lipid influx Iniation of Inflammation Monocyte Influx Inadequate Wound Healing
Smooth muscle cell proliferation Matrix Deposition Atheroma Formation Thrombus Formation
Terminal Occlusion
Atherosclerosis to Atherothrombosis
Fibrous Cap Lumen Lipid Core
Plaque Vulnerability
Thin fibrous cap (65 um thick). Atheromatous lipid core size greater than 30%. An increased macrophage content. Degree of inflammation (systemic or local). Via hs C- reactive protein
Thrombus
Fibrous Cap
Lipid Core
Stable Plaque
Disrupted Plaque
Stable plaque less than 50% lumen 70% critical because it makes the pt symptomatic Symptoms is not necessary to produce ACS; the basis is as long as there is atherosclerosis Disrupted plaque ACS produce soft thrombus ( can be lyse and reperfuse_
6/6/2012
Slow progression
Hard plaque
Fragile plaque
Nonvulnerable plaque
Vulnerable plaque
Disruption, thrombosis
Plaque progression
Unstable Angina Myocardial Infarction Sudden Cardiac Death
Ischemic Triggers
TRIGGER
Exercise Assuming upright posture Cigarette smoking Cold exposure
MEDIATOR
Pulse pressure Heart rate Systolic BP Increased vascular resistance Catecholamine levels
6/6/2012
Hx : Severe localized chest or arm pain at rest or on minimal exertion >20mins, crescendo pattern PE : Pulmonary edema ; New or worsening MR; S3; New or worsening rales ECG : Transient ST segment changes (> 0.05 mv) ; New Bundle branch Block; Sustained Ventricular Tachycardia Cardiac Markers
Normal
LC
Total occlusion
Occlusion
Occlusion
Anterior Infarction
Inferior infarct
6/6/2012
Cut-Off Value : 0.04 ng/dl in the cytoplasm Upper Reference Limit : 0.06 ng/dl
Pathological findings
Total CK
CK-MB
LDH
Troponin I
Myoglobin first to increase and first to go down (1st 1o hrs) not reliable First 4 80 hours troponin I and T more sensitive because CK is elevated in renal problems, usually it is done at the first 6 hours. Dont wait for this result as long as hx and ECG is positive
Feature
History
Intermediate Likelihood
Chest/left arm pain Age > 70 Male DM
Low Likelihood
Probable ischemic symptoms with no intermediate characteristics Recent cocaine use Chest pain elicited by palpation T wave flattening or inversion with dominant R waves Normal ECG Normal
Examination
ECG
New or presumably Fixed Q waves new ST seg deviation Abnomal ST (> 0.5 mv) segment or T T wave inversion > wave inversion 0.2 mv not new Elevated cTnI, cTnT, CKMB Normal
Cardiac Markers
6/6/2012
Antithrombotic therapy
Prevents further thrombosis Allow endogenous fibrinolysis ( spontaneous reperfusion) Long term therapy, to prevent progression to complete occlusion To reduce risk of developing future events
Antithrombotic therapy
Aspirin Clopidogrel Heparin ( UFH and LMWH ) GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors
2. ACTIVATION
agonists (ADP, Epinephrine, Thrombin, TxA2) are secreted.
3. AGGREGATION
GP IIb/IIIa receptors bind fibrinogen to form a bridge between other platelets (platelet plug)
6/6/2012
Antiplatelet Therapy
Aspirin
Block formation of thromboxane A2 in platelets by cyclooxygenase inhibition Initial dose : 162 to 325 mg tab to be chewed Maintenance dose : 75 to 325 mg/day
UFH Loading dose : 75U/kg IV bolus with maintenance infusion of 1250 U/hr titrated to aPTT of 1.5 to 2x control for 2-3 days LMWH dose : 1mg/kg SC BID x 2-8 days
Clopidogrel
Adenosine Diphosphate (ADP) antagonists Inhibit platelet activation Given to patients who are unable to tolerate ASA ( hypersensitivity or GI contraindications,PUD,Gastritis) Initial dose : 300mg loading dose ( 4 tablets) Maintenance dose : 75 mg daily
Mechanisms of inhibitory action of unfractionated heparin (heparin) and low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH)
O2 Demand
O2 Supply
Mechanism of action of nitrates NO activates soluble guanylyl cyclase, resulting in increased production of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP). The second messenger cGMP reduces cytoplasmic calcium (Ca2+) by inhibiting inflow and stimulating mitochondrial uptake of calcium, thus mediating relaxation of smooth muscle cells and causing vasodilation
Effects of Beta Blockers on the ischemic heart Beta blockade has a beneficial effect on ischemic myocardium unless (1) the preload rises substantially as in left-sided heart failure or (2) vasospastic angina is present, in which case spasm may be promoted in some patients. Note the proposal that beta blockade diminishes exercise-induced vasoconstriction.
6/6/2012
ACE Inhibitors / A2 Receptor Antagonist Attenuation of Ventricular remodelling Reduction in recurrent MI and ischemia
Decrease in sympathetic activity Improvement in endothelial function Improving hypercoagulable state by decreasing PAI -1
Apical STEMI
Metoprolol / Atenolol
Initial dose Atenolol 25mg BID Metoprolol 50-100mg BID Titration : weekly No Target dose Atenolol 25mg BID Metoprolol 50-100 mg BID Do not abruptly discontinue use ! (Reduce dose gradually in 1-2 weeks)
Oval Spherical
Progressive Ventricular Remodelling To be started within 24 hours of MI Initial dose : Captopril 6.25mg q6-8 max of 50mg TID Enalapril 2.5mg/day max of 20mg BID Lisinopril 2.5mg/day max of 10mg/day
Precautions ?
Heart failure COPD Diabetes mellitus Peripheral vascular disease 1st degree AV block
Primary Goal for STEMI : Timely Reperfusion Percutaneous Catheter Intervention (PCI)
Fibrinolytic Agents
6/6/2012
Correlation of TIMI flow grade and mortality Time element if the pt complains of AP; brought in ER in 3 hours, do PCI or fibrinolytic? It will have the same result in first 3 hours. Beyond 3 hours do PCI because fibrinolyitic is not anymore effective
Fibrinolysis
Preferred if :
Early presentation (< 3 hrs from symptom onset and delay to PCI ) Invasive strategy is not an option
PCI lab occupied or not available Vascular access difficulties Lack of success to a skilled PCI lab
Absolute Contraindications : Known bleeding disorder Suspected aortic dissection Prolonged, traumatic CPR Altered consciousness Active internal bleeding Recent head trauma, spinal or intracranial surgery Previous hemorrhagic CVA Major trauma or surgery w/in the previous 2 weeks Persistent HPN > 200 / 120 mm Hg Pregnancy
Contraindications to Fibrinolysis including increased risk of bleeding and ICH Late presentation
Symptom onset > 3 hr ago
Time delay between onset of infarction and restoration of flow in the infarct-related artery
ACC/AHA Guidelines for the Management of Patients with ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction, 2004
6/6/2012
Patient self-transport
ACC/AHA Guidelines for the Management of Patients with ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction, 2004
Recommendations
We could reduce the burden of ACS through :
Nondiagnostic ECG Continue evaluation in ED or short-term observation unit Obtain follow-up serum cardiac markers and ECG Consider 2 D echo
ST elevation
Education of patients and relatives about the disease and its attendant risk factors and complications Train healthcare workers and physicians on how to recognize the clinical spectrum of ACS and to be able to administer timely therapeutic strategies following guidelines and protocols
Evidence of ischemia/infarction Yes Routine blood tests to be obtained on admission CBC Lipid profile Electrolyte levels No
Recommendations
Facility and capability improvement for hospitals and health institutions so that early recognition, observation of symptom progression and prompt delivery of accurate management may be carried out in the Emergency Department, Chest Pain Clinics, Urgency Care Units, Critical Care Units, Cardiac Catheterization and Interventional Units.