ACC AHA Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiac Assesement

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Transcript of ACC AHA Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiac Assesement

Overview• Drafted out by American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart

Association (AHA) initially in 1980 then revised again in 2002, 2007 and 2011.

• Comprising almost 20 topics relating to cardiac issues for patients undergoing non cardiac surgery.

• Eg : preoperative noninvasive evaluation of LV function; preoperative resting

12-lead ECG; noninvasive stress testing before non-cardiac surgery; reoperative coronary revascularization; betablocker therapy; statin therapy; preoperative ICU monitoring; use of volatile anesthetic agents; prophylactic

Nitroglycerin, maintenance of normothermia; glucose control; use of pulmonary artery catheters; intraoperative and postoperative ST-segment monitoring; surveillance for perioperative myocardial infarction; and the

tissue of when patients with cardiac stents can safely undergo elective surgery

Purpose

• Quick reference for decision making

• lower the risk of surgery

• evaluation of the patient’s current medical status

• make recommendations concerning the evaluation, management, and risk of cardiac problems over the entire preoperative period

• provide a clinical risk profile can be of use in making treatment decisions that may influence short- and long-term cardiac outcomes

GOALS

– IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS WITH UNSTABLE CARDIOVASCULAR CONDITION

– IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS WITH KNOWN AND SYMPTOMATIC Coronary Heart Disease (CHD)

– IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS AT RISK OF CHD» PVD» HTN» DM» SMOKING» HYPERCHOLESTROLEMIA

CLASSIFICATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS

CLASS 1Benefit >>> Risk

SHOULD

CLASS II ABENEFIT >> RISK

REASONABLE

CLASS II BBENEFIT > RISK

MAYBE CONSIDERED

CLASS IIIRISK > BENEFIT

SHOULD NOT

LEVEL A Multiple (3-5) population risk

LEVEL BLimited (2-3) population risk

LEVEL CVery limited (1-2) population risk

PREOPERATIVE CARDIAC EVALUATION

• Evaluation

History taking

• to identify serious cardiac conditions such as unstable coronary syndromes, prior angina, recent or past MI, decompensated HF, significant arrhythmias, and severe valvular disease

• history of a pacemaker or implantable cardioverter defibrillator

• Accurate recording of current medications used, including herbal and other nutritional supplements, and dosages

.

• Determine ASA status , surgery classification and functional capacity.

Status State

Class 1 No organic, physiologic, biochemical, or psychiatric disturbance.

Class 2 Mild to moderate systemic disturbance that may or may not be related to the reason for surgery Eg : Essential HTN, DM, Morbid Obesity, Anemia

Class 3 Severe systemic disturbance that may or may not be related to the reason for surgery, (does limit activity)Eg ; Uncontrolled HTN, DM with vascular complications, COPD with func. Limitation, angine pectoris, Hx of MI

Class 4 Severe systemic disturbance that is life-threatening with or without surgery Eg : CHF, advanced pulmonary, renal/hepatic dysfunction

Class 5 Moribund patient who has little chance of survival but is submitted to surgery as a last resort (resuscitative effort)Eg : Uncontrolled hemorrhage from ruptured abdominal aneurysm, cerebal trauma, pulmonary embolism.

Emergency (E) Any patient in whom an emergency operation is required

Risk Stratification

5 FACTORS FOR RISK STRATIFICATION

– Recency Of Coronary Revascularization

– Recency Of Last Favourable Cardiac Evaluation

– Presence Of Comorbidities-clinical Predictors

– Functional Status

– Risk Of Proposed Surgery

1-CORONARY REVASCULARISATION

• Complete coronary surgical revascularization -5 yrs

• PCI-- > 6months-5 yrs

• No recurrent Symptoms or signs of ischemia

• Clinical status is stable

No further cardiac testing is necessary

2-Coronary evaluation

• Past 2 years

• Invasive/non invasive tech

– Favorable– No definite change or new symptom

No further cardiac testing is necessary

3-Clinical predictors

• Major– Unstable coronary syndromes

• recent MI with evidence for ischemia ( >7 days & < 30days)• unstable or severe angina

– Decompensated CHF– Significant arrhythmia

• high grade AV block• symptomatic ventricular arrhythmia • supraventricular arrhythmia with uncontrolled rate

– Severe valvular disease

• Intermediate– Mild angina pectoris (Canadian class I or II)– Prior MI by history or pathological Q waves– Compensated or prior CHF– Diabetes mellitus– Renal impairment (creatinine > 2mg per dL)– Anemia – Pulmonary Disease (obstructive/restrictive)

• Minor– Advanced age– abnormal ECG (LVH, LBBB, ST-T change)– Rhythm other than sinus– Low functional capacity– History of stroke– Uncontrolled systemic hypertension

Functional Capacity

• Functional capacity can be expressed as metabolic equivalents (METs); the resting or basal oxygen consumption (Vo2) of a 70-kg, 40-year-old man in a resting state is 3.5 mL per kg per min, or 1 MET.

Duke’s Activity Status Index

• 1 MET– Can you take care of

self? – Eat, dress, use toilet?– Walk indoors in house?– Walk a block or two on

level at 2-3 mph?– Do light housework like

dusting or dishes?

• 4 METs

• 4 METsClimb a flight of stairs,

walk up hill?Walk on level at 4 mph?Run a short distance?Heavy houseworkGolf, bowling, dancing,

doubles tennisSwimming, singles tennis

football, basketball, skiing

• >10 METs

1 MET = 3.5 ml/kg/mt VO2

>10 METs-Excellent7-10 good4-7 moderate≤ 4 poor

Classification of surgeries according to Risk.

• High (reported cardiac risk > 5%)

• emergent major operations, esp. in elderly

• aortic and other major vascular procedures

• peripheral vascular procedures

• anticipated prolonged procedure with large fluid shift/blood loss

• Intermediate (reported cardiac risk < 5%)

– carotid endarterectomy

– head and neck

– intraperitoneal & intrathoracic

– orthopedic

– prostate

• Low (reported cardiac risk < 1%)

– endoscopic procedures

– superficial procedure

– cataract

– breast

9 step algorithm

9 step algorithm

9 step algorithm9 step algorithm

Cardiac Conditions that Need Evaluation and Treatment Before Surgery

Condition Examples

Unstable coronary syndromes

Unstable or severe angina (CCS class III, IV) , Recent MI

Decompensated HF

Significant Arrhythmias High Grade AV Block, Mobitz II AV Block, 3rd Degree AV block, Symptomatic Ventricular Arrhythmias, Supraventricular Arrhytmias with HR > 100 bpm at rest, Symptomatic Bradycardia, Newly Recognized VT

Severe Valvular Disease Severe aortic stenosis, Symptomatic Mitral Stenosis (dyspnea on exertion, exertional presyncope or HF)

• Class IIA

• It is probably recommended that patients with functional capacity greater than or equal to 4 METs without symptoms‡ proceed to planned surgery. 

• It is probably recommended that patients with poor (less than 4 METs) or unknown functional capacity and 3 or more clinical risk factors who are scheduled for vascular surgery consider testing if it will change management. 

• It is probably recommended that patients with poor (less than 4 METs) or unknown functional capacity and 3 or more clinical risk factors who are scheduled for intermediate risk surgery proceed with planned surgery with heart rate control.

• It is probably recommended that patients with poor (less than 4 METs) or unknown functional capacity and 1 or 2 clinical risk factors who are scheduled for vascular or intermediate risk surgery proceed with planned surgery with heart rate control.

• Class IIB

• Noninvasive testing might be considered if it will change management for patients with poor (less than 4 METs) or unknown functional capacity and 3 or more clinical risk factors who are scheduled for intermediate risk surgery. ∥

• Noninvasive testing might be considered if it will change management for patients with poor (less than 4 METs) or unknown functional capacity and 1 or 2 clinical risk factors who are scheduled for vascular or intermediate risk surgery. ∥

PREOP TESTING

• ECG

• DETECT LVH,BBB & CONDUCTION DEFECT

• PREVIOUS MI

• BASELINE FOR INTRA AND POST OP COMPARISON

• INCREASED PERIOP RISK• ST DEPRESSION MORE THAN .5 MM• LVH WITH STAIN PATTERN• LBBB

• EXERCISE STRESS TEST

• STRONGEST DETERMINANT OF RISK AND NEED FOR INVASIVE MONITORING

• LEAD SELECTION

• ECG CRITERIA– 1 M M OF J POINT DEPRESSION

– 2MM OF ST DEPRESSION AT 80 MS FROM J POINT

– ST ELEVATION

– NON ECG RESP• LOW ACHIEVED HR• SYSTOLIC HYPOTENSION• INABILITY TO EXERCISE FOR MORE THAN 3 MIN

PHARMACOLOGICAL STRESS TEST

• Two Categories– Dobutamine Stress Echo-incr. Mvo2

– New/Incr In Rwma– More Than 5/16 Lt Ventricular Segm Involvement

– Dipyridamole Thallium-mimics Coronary Art Dialatation Resp Associated With Exercise

– Infarcted Area-fixed Defect– Ischemic Area-reversible Defect

ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY

– LVEF– RWMA– Valvular Abn– Cong Cardiac Defects

CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY

• Non Invasive Testing-high Risk Of Adverse Outcome

• Angina Unresponsive To adequate Medical Therapy

• Unstable Angina-intermediate And High Risk Sx

• High Clinical Predictor In High Risk Sx

PERIOP THERAPY

• BETA BLOCKERS– CVS EFFECTS

• ↓ HR-(diastolic Time)• ↓ Contractility• Plaque Stabilization- ↓ Shear Forces• Antiarrythmic Effect

– ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA• CLINICAL -ANY 2

– AGE>65– HTN– CHR SMOKER– SER CHOLESTROL>240 mg/dl– DM

• CARDIAC RISK INDEX CRITERIA– HIGH RISK SX PROCEDURE– IHD– CVA– DM– CRF

OTHER THERAPIES

• Alpha-2 Adrenergic Agonist

• Regional Anesthesia

– Epidural