Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome...

21
Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction

Transcript of Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome...

Page 1: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction

Page 2: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Introduction

• Stable angina• Acute coronary syndrome– STEMI– NSTEACS

• NSTEMI• Unstable angina

Page 3: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Introduction

• Stable angina arise when lumen stenosis >70% → impaired blood supply to heart only during on exertion or increased metabolic demand

• Acute coronary syndrome arise when vessel becomes occluded by thrombus– Unstable angina – when atherosclerotic plaque shoot of

embolus downstream to cause microinfarct– NSTEMI – when necrosis confined to endocardial layers

(most susceptible to ischaemia)– STEMI – when full thickness necrosis of the ventricular

wall occurs

Page 4: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Introduction

•Stable angina – normal ECG, normal troponin•Unstable angina – normal troponin•NSTEMI – elevated troponin•STEMI – elevated ST segment

•Criteria for thrombolysis or PCI (i.e. STEMI)– >1mm elevation in 2 contiguous limb leads– >2mm elevation in 2 contiguous precordial leads– New onset LBBB

Page 5: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

History

• All causes central crushing chest pain or tightness radiating to arm, neck and jaw

• Stable angina usually last less than 20 minutes, precipitated by exertion and relieved by rest or nitrates

• ACS usually lasts more than 20 minutes, sudden onset usually at rest and not relieved by rest

• All associated with sx of ↓cardiac output – SOB, presyncope or syncope, palpitations

• All associated with sx of sympathetic activation – nausea, vomiting, sweating, pale, clammy

• All associated with risk factors – HTN, high cholesterol, DM, smoking, family history

Page 6: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Examination

• Usually no signs• Signs of precipitants (e.g. anaemia, infection,

thyrotoxicosis, arrhythmias), risk factors, other atherosclerotic diseases (PVD, stroke), complications (e.g. MR, CHF)

Page 7: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Investigations

• Resting ECG (on arrival)– Stable angina – normal– Unstable angina or NSTEMI – ST depression or T

wave inversion– STEMI – ST elevation → Q wave (permanent) → T

wave inversion (in this order)• Cardiac enzymes – Troponin, CKMB/CK ratio, AST,

LDH– Stable angina and unstable angina – normal– NSTEMI, STEMI – raised

Page 8: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Investigations

•FBE – anaemia, infection•UECR, coagulation study – ability to take contrast and

undergo PCI•FBG, lipid profile (within 24h) – DM,

hypercholesterolaemia•CXR – r/o aortic dissection, pneumonia, pneumothorax,

interstitial lung disease

Page 9: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Investigations

• Note: Troponin vs CKMB• CKMB – rise in 4hr, elevated for 72hr• Trop – rise in 8hr, elevated for 5 days (trop I) and 10 days

(trop T)• If trop –ve → repeat in 8hr → last serial trop done 8hr

after sx resolves• CKMB can be used to detect second infarcts

Page 10: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Acute Management

• Oxygen therapy• GTN (½ sublingual tab)• Aspirin 300mg• IV morphine 2.5~5mg + IV metoclopramide 10mg

Page 11: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Hospital Management

• Aspirin, GTN, morphine, oxygen if not already given• Monitor oximetry, BP, continuous ECG• 12 lead ECG, IV access, cardiac enzyme

Page 12: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

STEMI

• Reperfuse ASAP (within 12hrs of onset of sx – i.e. before MI is complete):– Antiplatelet therapy (aspirin and clopidogrel ±

GPIIb/IIIa inhibitor)– Anticoagulation agent (unfractionated heparin or

LMWH)

– Immediate PCI or fibrinolytic therapy – PCI has higher reperfusion rate and is better if pt present > 1hr but thrombolysis is gold standard if pt arrive within an hour

Page 13: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

STEMI

• Subsequent management (start during this hospital admission)– Statins, aspirin and clopidogrel, ACEI (or ARB), β-blocker (if CI then

CCB)– Anticoagulation therapy to prevent thromboembolism (warfarin for 6mos

if large anterior MI, esp if echo show large akinetic/dyskinetic area, aneurysm or mural thrombus)

– Nitrates PRN– Cardiac rehabilitation

• Antiplatelet post stent– Aspirin for life– Clopidogrel for at least 6wks for metal stent– Clopidogrel for at least 12mos for drug eluting stent– Drug eluting stent have lower early re-stenosis rate c.f. bare metal stent

however have a problem of late thrombosis

Page 14: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

UA and NSTEMI

• Stabilize acute coronary lesion– Anti-platelet (aspirin and clopidogrel ± GPIIb/IIIa inhibitor)– Anti-thrombin (UFH or LMWH)– Anti-ischaemia (β-blocker if CI then CCB, consider nitrates,

morphine)• High risk – urgent angiography ± PCI• Low risk – arrange stress tests• Subsequent management (start during this hospital

admission)– Statins, aspirin and clopidogrel, ACEI (or ARB), β-blocker

(if CI then CCB)– Nitrates PRN– Cardiac rehabilitation

Page 15: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Risk Stratification

• TIMI Score (Para Sea)• Historical– PHx – known CAD (stenosis ≥ 50%)– Age>65– ≥3 RFs for CAD– Aspirin use in past 7d

• Presentation– ST segment deviation ≥0.5mm– ↑cardiac enzymes

• Recent (≤24hr) severe angina

Page 16: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Risk Stratification

• Risk stratification of NSTEACS – “HEART DOC”– Haemodynaic compromise– ECG changes– Arrhythmia– Renal failure– Troponin rise– Diabetes mellitus– Ongoing chest pain– Cardiac bypass anytime or PCI in last 6months– Having 1 of these → high risk group

Page 17: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Stable Angina

•Statins, aspirin (or clopidogrel), ACEI, β-blocker•Nitrates – sx relief or prophylaxis (patch or tablets but

must have 8h nitrate free period/day)

Wholistic care (all IHD):•Lifestyle change – quit smoking, eat healthy, exercise

more, avoid excessive exertion or stress•Risk factor control – HTN, high cholesterol (keep

<4mmol/L), DM•Assess depression, level of support

Page 18: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Summary

• MOAN• ECG, troponin, R/O DDx• Code AMI• Reduce time to PCI

Page 19: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Quiz 1 - Complications

• Early (0~48h)– Any arrhythmias – worry about AF, VT, VF, CHB– LVF → cardiogenic shock

• Medium (2~7d)– Any arrhythmias – worry about AF, VT, VF, CHB– LVF → cardiogenic shock– Rupture of papillary muscle (→MR), IV septum, LV wall → acute

cardiac failure → APO → death• Late (>7d)

– Any arrhythmias – worry about AF, VT, VF, CHB– Cardiac failure– LV aneurysm → mural thrombus → thromboembolism– Dressler’s syndrome (3~8wk) – recurrent pericarditis following AMI

• (Hence why β blockers given initially → prevents arrhythmia as well as rupture of cardiac muscle)

Page 20: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Quiz 2

• Contraindication for thrombolysis– Past allergic reaction, past streptokinase use– Past stroke – haemorrhagic (ever), ischaemic (6mos)– Brain tumour/trauma– Recent bleeding or risk of bleeding – e.g. GI bleeding,

liver disease– Recent surgery– Hypertension– Pregnancy

Page 21: Acute Management of Myocardial Infarction. Introduction Stable angina Acute coronary syndrome –STEMI –NSTEACS NSTEMI Unstable angina.

Quiz 3

• PCI vs CABG– Advantage of PCI – less invasive, less peri-operative

stay, morbidity and mortality– Advantage of CABG – higher chance of

revascularization– PCI over CABG – single or double vessel disease,

inability to tolerate surgery– CABG over PCI – triple vessel disease or left main

disease, diabetes mellitus, failed PCI