The document discusses coronary artery disease and ischemic heart disease. It covers identifying CAD, risk factors, types of acute coronary syndromes like stable angina and myocardial infarction. Treatments discussed include medications, percutaneous coronary intervention, and coronary artery bypass grafting.
The document discusses coronary artery disease and ischemic heart disease. It covers identifying CAD, risk factors, types of acute coronary syndromes like stable angina and myocardial infarction. Treatments discussed include medications, percutaneous coronary intervention, and coronary artery bypass grafting.
The document discusses coronary artery disease and ischemic heart disease. It covers identifying CAD, risk factors, types of acute coronary syndromes like stable angina and myocardial infarction. Treatments discussed include medications, percutaneous coronary intervention, and coronary artery bypass grafting.
The document discusses coronary artery disease and ischemic heart disease. It covers identifying CAD, risk factors, types of acute coronary syndromes like stable angina and myocardial infarction. Treatments discussed include medications, percutaneous coronary intervention, and coronary artery bypass grafting.
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Coronary Artery Disease
Patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) are often
identified during the history and physical examination. When identified preoperatively, CAD should prompt risk stratification following the ACC/AHA algorithm. Patients with acute coronary syndromes should not undergo noncardiac surgery. Tests to consider include: ■ Chest radiograph to evaluate for cardiomegaly, pulmonary edema, or pleural effusion. ■ ECG to evaluate for left ventricular hypertrophy, ST segment changes, inverted T waves, Q waves, and arrhythmias. ■ Transthoracic Doppler echocardiography for wall motion abnormalities, ejection fraction, and chamber pressures. ■ Stress test to assess for functional cardiac ischemia. This can be combined with echocardiography. ■ Perfusion nuclear imaging to assess cardiac perfusion at rest and with function. ■ Cardiac angiography. Asymptomatic patients with CAD may, however, develop symptoms in the perioperative period. Risk factors for CAD are DM, HTN, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, and a family history. CAD may result in stable angina or one of the acutecoronary syndromes (ACSs). Stable angina often presents with precordial pain radiating to the left arm, neck, and jaw upon exertion. It is relieved by rest or the use of sublingual nitroglycerin. ACSs include unstable angina, non–STelevated MI, and ST- elevated MI. Symptoms are similar to stable angina but occur with less exertion than is usual, or at rest, and do not abate with further rest. The history surrounding the onset of chest pain has a diagnostic sensitivity of 90% when the symptoms are classic. An ECG may show ST segment depression or inverted T waves indicating ischemia. ST segment elevation indicates frank MI. The treatment of any patient suspected of having ACS begins with the correct diagnosis. The diagnosis can be confirmed with: ■ A 12-lead ECG (ST elevation, inverted T waves, Q waves). ■ Cardiac enzymes (CK-MB [MB isoenzyme of creatine kinase], troponins). The initial treatment should include a standardized approach to reduce morbidity and mortality. All of the following should be instituted concurrently: ■ Oxygen via facemask. ■ Nitrates administered sublingually (or intravenously). ■ Morphine for pain and to decrease sympathetic output. ■ Aspirin 325 mg administered sublingually. Additional treatment may include intravenous heparin and/or platelet glycoprotein IIa/IIIb antagonists to impair clotting and beta blockers to decrease myocardial oxygen demand. Definitive treatment may include the administration of thrombolytic agents, percutaneous angioplasty with stenting, or coronary artery bypass grafting. The use of perioperative beta blockers has been shown to reduce the likelihood of cardiac events including MI. Patients with a recent MI may be at risk for re- infarction following the initial infarct. This has led to the historical suggestion of avoiding elective surgery for a period of 6 months. The current management of MI has radically changed since the early 1990s and, given the number of possible cardiac interventions after an MI, the risk of re-infarction may be much less than was originally thought. This may allow elective surgery to be performed within a much shorter period of time after an infarction, perhaps after only 6 weeks. NEW TOPIC Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD) • Disease process secondary to stenotic coronary arteries that leads to ischemic sequelae from a myocardial oxygen supply and demand imbalance. • Myocardial oxygen is dependent on oxygen supply and coronary blood flow. Myocardial oxygen demand is determined by wall stress, heart rate and contractility. Consequences of IHD Stable Angina Transient chest discomfort due to a fixed atheromatous plaque secondary to a myocardial oxygen supply and demand imbalance. • Symptoms include dyspnea on exertion, retrosternal chest pain that may radiate to the arm or jaw. Patients will often describe the symptoms as a pressure or an elephant sitting on their chest. Patients may place a clenched fist over the sternum (Levine’s sign). Symptoms normally appear when a vessel is at least 70% stenotic. The symptoms normally cease after 5–10 minutes with rest. • Diagnostic workup – EKG may show ST depression or T wave inversion. Stress testing is done (bike, treadmill, or pharmacologic) to assess cardiac reserve. Pharmacologic testing may be carried out with dipyridamole thallium in persons unable to exercise. Echocardiogram is used to assess wall function, ejection fraction, and valvular function. Coronary angiography is used to assess stenotic coronary arteries (gold standard). Acute Coronary Syndrome Disease processes along a continuum secondary to a ruptured atherosclerotic plaque with subsequent formation of a thrombus within the coronary vessel. • Unstable angina – occurs secondary to a coronary thrombus that is partially occlusive. Patients have chest pain that is not relieved by rest. Can see signs of ischemic changes on an EKG with negative cardiac enzymes. • Non-ST segment elevation MI – due to partially occlusive thrombus that results in a subendocardial infarction. Patients present with chest pain, nausea, dyspnea, and diaphoresis. EKG shows ST depression or T wave inversion. Will see elevated serum biomarkers such as troponins and CK-MB. (CK-MB is used to assess for early reinfarction due to its shorter half-life in comparison to troponins.) • ST segment elevation MI – due to an occlusive thrombus that results in a transmural infarct. Will see ST segment elevations and serum biomarkers. Symptoms similar to NSTEMI. Complications of MI (STEMI or NSTEMI) – may lead to fatal arrhythmias, conductions blocks, cardiogenic shock, ventricular wall rupture, and heart failure. Treatment of IHD • Nitrates – cause venodilation, which decreases preload (determinant of wall stress) and dilates coronary arteries. • Beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers – decrease oxygen demand by decreasing heart rate and contractility. • Ranolazine – inhibits sodium channels in myocardial cells, which leads to less intracellular calcium and decreased contractility. • Percutaneous coronary intervention – balloontipped catheter is placed in a peripheral artery and maneuvered into the stenotic coronary vessel. A bare metal or drug eluting stent iis then deployed to increase the patency of the coronary vessel. Patients are placed on antiplatelet drugs to decrease coronary thrombosis, as the stents are thrombogenic (drug-eluting stents are more thrombotic than bare metal stents). Drug-eluting stents decrease the rate of epithelialization. • Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) – grafting done to bypass obstructive coronary vessels. Preferred for multivessel disease. Treatment of MI • Morphine – used for analgesia and anxiolysis. • Oxygen – increases oxygen supply to the myocardium. • Nitrates – improve coronary flow. • Aspirin – decreases platelet aggregationBeta- blockers – decrease myocardial oxygen demand. • Transfer to hospital (remember time is myocardium) for PCI with stent deployment or fibrinolytic therapy if the hospital does not have interventional cardiology capabilitiesA