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Cardio 20 – Ischaemic Heart Disease and Chest Pain Anil Chopra 1 & 4. State the main cardiac factors which give rise to chest pain and define myocardial ischaemia and its pathophysiology. Angina Pectoris: chest pain due to myocardial ischaemia. Coronary artery has limited flow due to atherosclerosis. Oxygen demand of the myocardium is not met. Coronary Stenosis: 70% loss of luminal area exercised induced angina 90% loss of luminal area rest angina Angina can also be due to: Coronary artery spasm All REDUCE Microvascular ischaemia SUPPLY of Coronary arterio-venous fistula. blood to the heart Anaemia Uncontrolled tachycardia (fast heart beat) All INCREASE Left ventricular hypertrophy DEMAND of O2 Hypertension demand in the Increased catecholamine levels (stress) myocardium Types of Angina Stable Angina – occurs over several weeks but on exertion. Unstable Angina – angina even at rest but gets worse on exertion Variant Angina – pain is spontaneous, shows ST elevation on ECG. Syndrome X – myocardial ischaemia without evident coronary atherosclerosis or large vessel disease. 2. State the main clinical investigations that help diagnose angina. Investigations HISTORY: Should be simple, un-technical and open Site, radiation, character, onset (i.e. sudden or gradual) severity, positional, alleviating factors. Risk factors: smoking, diabetes, hypertension, cholesterol, family history. Past medical history, previous treatment, drug history, allergies, social history. Differential diagnoses for Chest Pain Angina Pericarditis Musculoskeletal problem Gastro-oesophageal Pulmonary Differential Diagnosis for Severe Chest pain at Rest Myocardial infarction Aortic dissection Pericarditis Pulmonary Embolus EXAMINATION: Pulse rhythm Blood pressure BLOOD TEST: Lipids (triglyceride, LDL and HDL count) Blood glucose Thyroid function tests Full blood count (FBC) CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY: Tube inserted in artery in the leg and directed toward coronary artery, dye is injected and arteries taken. RESTIING 12 LEAD ECG: May be normal if no pain at rest. May be evidence of previous myocardial infarctions in q-waves. May show LV hypertrophy. Check rhythm & conduction abnormalities. ST elevation in myocardial infarction. EXERCISE/STRESS TEST Use treadmill/bicycle to cause exertion Look at ECG changes Can also use vasodilators and inotropic drugs. 3. State some of the drug treatments for angina. TREAT THE UNDERLYING PROBLEM (Symptom alleviation) β-blockers: o 1st line of therapy o lower heart rate, reduce myocardial wall tension, and reduce cardiomonocyte ATP requirement. Don’t use if bradycardia, AV block, sick sinus syndrome, left ventricular failure, asthma, depression, vascular diseases are present. Side-effects include fatigue, lethargy, insomnia, erectile dysfunction. E.g.s atenolol, metoprolol, bisprolol Calcium Antagonists: o Decrease heart rate o Increase coronary flow. o Decrease coronary spasm o Negative inotropic reactions Don’t use if decompensated heart failure, bradycardia, AV block, sick sinus syndrome are present. Side-effects include hypotension, peripheral oedema, constipation, headache and dizziness. E.g.s Vermapil, Diltiazem, nifedpine, amlodipine Nitrates: o Reduce preload by reducing venous dilation o Dilates coronary arteries. o Glyceryl trinitrate is used for prophylaxis during exercise. o Are converted to NO and cause vasodilation. Don’t use if aortic sinus, or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are present. Side-effects include headache, hypotension, presyncope and syncope Nicorandil: o Activates K+ channels with nitrate and causes veno & ateriodilation o Only used when previous drugs are not safe. Don’t use in situations of low cardiac output. Side-effects include headaches and flushing. If Channel Blockers: o Reduces heart rate by reducing sinus rhythm o Improves exercise capability. o Used only if β-blockers are unable to be used. Side-effects include visual disturbances. Angioplasty: o Balloon attached to catheter placed in coronary artery and then blown up, or stent used. o Increases coronary blood supply. o Used for symptom control although ineffective in stable angina. Coronary Bypass: o Other artery used to bypass coronary artery. Lasts long. There are other risks in open heart surgery & rehabilitation.