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ISCHMIC HEART DISEASE PRESENTATION DR . OMAR ALKASEM Natural History of CAD : A story of remodeling 7 Heart - Pathology Heart - Pathology Ischemic Heart Disease 75% stenosis = symptomatic ischemia induced by exercise 90% stenosis = symptomatic even at rest Pathogenesis ↓ coronary perfusion relative to myocardial demand Role of Acute Plaque Change (Erosion/ulceration, Hemorrhage into the atheroma, Rupture/fissuring, Thrombosis) Role of Inflammation T cell, Macrophages (MMPs), CRP Role of Coronary Thrombus The most dreaded complication Role of Vasoconstriction (VC) Platelet & Endothelial factors, VC substances Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors History of CAD/PAD Male Sex History of TIA/CVA Smoking Hypertension Diabetes Mellitus Dyslipidemia Low HDL < 40 Elevated LDL / TG Family History - event in first degree relative > 55 male, > 65 female Chronic Kidney Disease Obesity Lack of regular physical activity Diet poor in fruits, vegetables, and fiber Age > 45 male, > 55 female Western Lifestyle Smoking, Framingham Most Significant Milestones 1960 Cigarette smoking found to increase the risk of heart disease 1961 Cholesterol level, blood pressure, and electrocardiogram abnormalities found to increase the risk of heart disease 1967 Physical activity found to reduce the risk of heart disease and obesity to increase the risk of heart disease 1970 High blood pressure found to increase the risk of stroke 1976 Menopause found to increase the risk of heart disease 1978 Psychosocial factors found to affect heart disease 1988 High levels of HDL cholesterol found to reduce risk of death 1994 Enlarged left ventricle (one of two lower chambers of the heart) shown to increase the risk of stroke 1996 Progression from hypertension to heart failure described Ischemic Cascade Angina Δ ECG Stress ECG Systolic Dysfunction Stress Echo/MRI Diastolic Dysfunction Perfusion Abnormalities Nuclear Imaging Duration and severity of ischemia Heart - Pathology Ischemic Heart Disease Classification = mainly 4 types Angina pectoris Acute Coronary syndromes Sudden cardiac death Chronic IHD with heart failure Angina Pectoris At least 70% occlusion of coronary artery resulting in pain. What kind of pain? Chest pain Radiating pain to: Left shoulder Jaw Left or Right arm Usually brought on by physical exertion as the heart is trying to pump blood to the muscles, it requires more blood that is not available due to the blockage of the coronary artery(ies) Is self limiting usually stops 21 when exertion is ceased Spectrum of ACS Presentations UA Definition Ischemia without necrosis Negative Biomarkers NSTEMI STEMI Necrosis (nontransmural) Transmural necrosis Positive biomarkers Positive biomarkers Diagnosis No ECG ST-segment elevation Treatment Invasive or conservative depending on risk ECG ST-segment elevation Immediate reperfusion MI –Complications Poor prognosis in = elderly, females, DM, old case of MI, Anterior wall infarct – worst, posterior –worse, Inferior wall – best 1. Arrhythmia = Vent. Fibrillation – MC arrhythmia lead to sudden death in MI patients, before they reach hospital 2. pump failure – LVF, cariogenic shock, if >LV wall infarcts, lead to death ( 70% of hospitalized MI patients) 3. Ventricular rupture = Free or lateral LV wall – MC site, later cause false aneurysm, 4. True aneurysm = rupture is very rare 5. Pericarditis = Dressler’s syndrome ( Late MI complication) 6. Recurrence Dysrhythmias Occurs in 72-100% of AMI pts treated in coronary care unit PVCs are common in AMI occur in >90% of AMI patients Atrial premature contractions are also common occur in up to 50% of AMI patients not associated with increased mortality Dysrhythmias Early in AMI, pts often show increased autonomic nervous system activity sinus brady, AV block, hypotension occur from increased vagal tone Later, increased sympathetic activity results in incr catecholamine release thus creates electrical instability: PVCs, Vtach, Vfib, accelerated idioventricular rhythms, AV junctional tachycardia Dysrhythmias Hemodynamic consequences of dysrhythmias are dependent on ventricular function Normal hearts have a loss of 10-20% of left ventricular output when atrial kick is eliminated Reduced left ventricular compliance can result in 35% reduction in stroke volume when the atrial systole is eliminated Dysrhythmias Persistant tachycardia is associated with poor prognosis due increase myocardial oxygen use When Vtach occurs late in AMI course, usually associated with transmural infarct and left ventricular dysfunction induces hemodynamic deterioration mortality rate approaches 50% Conduction Disturbances First degree and Mobitz I (Wenckebach) more common with inferior AMI intermittent during the first 72 hrs after infarction rarely progresses to complete block or pathologic rhythm Mobitz II usually associated with anterior AMI does progress to complete heart block Conduction Disturbances Complete Heart Block occurs in setting of inferior MI usually progresses from less AV blocks this form is usually stable & should resolve Mortality is 15% in absence of RV involvement & increases to 30% when RV is affected Complete block in setting of anterior MI results in grave prognosis Conduction Disturbance New RBBB occurs in approximately 2% of AMI pts associated with anteroseptal AMI associated with increased mortality because often leads to complete AV block Conduction Disturbance New LBBB occurs in 5% of pts with AMI associated with high mortality Left posterior hemiblock associated with higher mortality than isolated anterior hemiblock represents larger area of infarction 58 yo Man, Chest pain after lunch on the way to car. Bad sushi? Physical Examination Not helpful in distinguishing pts with ACS from those with non cardiac etiologies Pts may appear deceptively will without distress or be uncomfortable, pale, cyanotic, and in respiratory distress. Vital Signs Bradycardic rhythms are more common with inferior wall MI in the setting of anterior wall MI, bradycardia or heart block is very poor prognostic sign Extremes of blood pressures are associated with worse prognosis Heart Sounds S1 and S2 are often diminished due to poor myocardial contractility S3 is present in 15-20% of pts with AMI implies a failing myocardium S4 is common in pts with long standing HTN or myocardial dysfunction Presence of new systolic murmur is an ominous sign signifies papillary m. dysfunction, flail leaflet of mitral valve, or VSD Differential Dx for ACS Chest Pain Syndromes (beyond STEMI, NSTEMI, UA) Aortic dissection Pulmonary embolus Perforating ulcer Pericarditis GERD (Gastroesophageal reflux disease) Heart failure, Pneumonia, Pneumothorax Example of ST-segment Elevation (STEMI) J point STE Example of ST-segment Depression (UA/STEMI) STD J point Normal 12-lead ECG LATERAL ANTERIOR LATERAL INFERIOR http://www.uptodate.com/contents/image?imageKey=CARD%2F1617. Accessed Aug 6. 2011. Early-Stage Acute MI (STEMI) ST-segment elevation T-wave inversion ST-segment depression UA - NSTEMI T-wave inversion 48 yo M, HBP with Chest pain while walking ECG ST segment is elevated on the initial ECG in approximately 50% of pts with AMI most other AMI pts will have ST depression and/or T wave inversions Only 1-5% of pts with AMI have an entirely normal initial ECG ECG Reciprocal ST segment changes predict: a larger infarct distribution an increased severity of underlying CAD more severe pump failure a higher likelihood of cardiovascular complications increased mortality Difficult ECG interpretations ST elevation in absence of AMI early repolarization LVH pericarditis/myocarditis Left ventricular aneurysm Hypertropic cardiomyopathy hypothermia ventricular paced rhythms LBBB T wave inversions without ischemia .persistent juvenile pattern .seizures or Stokes Adams syncope .post-tachycardia T wave inversion .post-pacemaker T wave inversion .Intracranial pathology (CNS hemorrhage) .Mitral valve prolapse .Pericarditis .primary or secondary myocardial disease T wave inversion without ischemia PE or cor pulmonale spontaneous PTX myocardial contusion LVH ventricular paced rhythms RBBB LBBB Cardiac Enzymes Serial measurements are more sensitive and accurate than initial single measurement serum markers have less utility in the diagnosis of UA, only about 50% will have elevated troponins Myoglobin Rises within 2-3 hours of symptoms onset peaks within 4 to 24 hours more sensitive than CK and CK-MB but not specific for cardiac muscle there is a high false-positive rate due to its presence in all muscle tissue Troponin Main regulatory protein for the actin-myosin myofibrils 3 subunits: inhibitory subunit (Trop I) tropomyosin binding subunit (Trop T) calcium binding subunit (Trop C) Trop I has not been identified in skeletal m. during any stage of develop therefore specific to myocardium Non-MI Causes of Troponin Elevation Timing of Release of Various Biomarkers After Acute Myocardial Infarction Cardiac-specific troponins are optimum biomarkers (Level IC) For STEMI, reperfusion therapy should be initiated as soon as possible and is not contingent on a biomarker assay (Level IC) TIMI Risk Score (n=7) TIMI Risk Score Calculator Age ≥65 years? Yes (+1) ≥3 Risk Factors for CAD? Yes (+1) Known CAD (stenosis ≥50%)? Yes (+1) ASA Use in Past 7d Yes (+1) Severe angina (≥2 episodes w/in 24 hrs)? Yes (+1) ST changes ≥0.5 mm? Yes (+1) + Cardiac Marker? Yes (+1) Total Score pts What does TIMI RISK mean? Increasing TIMI RISK 0/1 to 5/7 increases risk of death, MI, urgent revascularization within 14 days 5% to 41%. Treatment of Acute Coronary Syndrome Early Invasive Initial Conservative Cardiovascular Diet