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Atherosclerotic coronary vascular disease • leading cause of death in the U.S. !! • men > 40 y.o. • women > 50 y.o. • declining rates since 1980 : 42 % !! • lifestyle alterations • 7-9 million Americans Atherosclerotic coronary vascular disease • ASYMPTOMATIC ~ 50 % • SYMPTOMATIC ~ 50 % • ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE = ANGINA Platelet clumping Fibrin PLAQUE RUPTURE AND BLOOD CLOTTING IN AN ATHEROSCLEROTIC BLOOD VESSEL Red blood cells Red blood cells and fibrin Platelet plug HMG COA REDUCTASE INHIBITORS Drug Strengths Equipotent Daily Monthly Dosage Dose Cost $ Fluvastatin (Lescol) Lovastatin* (Mevacor) Pravastatin* (Pravachol) Simvastatin (Zocor) 20, 40 20 20-80 34 -77 10, 20, 40 10 10-80 37-234 10, 20, 40 10 10-40 53-96 5, 10, 20, 40 5 5-40 53-106 Use of HMg COAs can reduce cholesterol by 35%. * Should not be used cyclosporine, niacin, gemfibrozil - myositis; however no reports with fluv Atherosclerotic coronary vascular disease • • • • • • • RISK FACTORS age and sex genetics; family history serum lipid levels HTN tobacco ( smoking) elevated blood glucose ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE • ASCVD: coronary arteries>>> decreased blood supply to myocardium= ischemia >>>pain= ANGINA • May be slowly OR rapidly progressive; with or without symptoms ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE • ANGINA : most common cause= ASCVD • also HTN • anemia • RHD • CHF CARDIAC ARREST • • • • sudden cardiac death >90% associated with underlying CVD 30 % of all natural deaths in U.S. cardiac arrhythmias: ventricular fibrillation • most common in early am ANGINA PECTORIS status • • • • • • • initial; exertional or at rest; LEVEL STABLE vs. PROGRESSIVE FREQUENCY- SEVERITY- CONTROL brief chest pain ( 1-3 minutes) ususally size of fist in mid-chest aching, squeezing, tightness may radiate, left shoulder, arm, mandible, palate, tongue ANGINA PECTORIS • DENTAL OFFICE • STRESS, ANXIETY, FEAR>>>> release of endogenous epinephrine>>> increased HR, BP ( HR x MAP > 12,000 !!) >>> increased cardiac load, O2 demand>>> additional epinephrine ( LA) >>> exacerbated angina ANGINA PECTORIS • MEDICAL MANAGEMENT • exercise, weight loss, diet, smoking cessation, other medical conditions control: diabetes, HTN, thyroid, anemia, arrhythmias • DRUGS: vasodilators ( NGN), etc. ANGINA PECTORIS • DRUGS • vascular dilators: alleviate coronary artery spasms; open up occluded vessels, increase blood flow • NGN, under tongue, transdermal patches • longer acting NITRATES ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE • • • • • • • LABORATORY TESTS chest radiograph, fluoroscopy EKG echocardiography technicium Tc 99 scan enzymes ( LDH, ALT, AST) angiography DENTAL MANAGEMENT for ANGINA PECTORIS • mild diagnosed, monitored infrequent symptoms use NGN <2 x week; exertion only easily controlled • moderate diagnosed, ± monitored occasional symptoms use NGN <5 x week; exertion easily controlled DENTAL MANAGEMENT for ANGINA PECTORIS • severe diagnosed, ± monitored ± frequent symptoms use NGN <8 x week; exertion not necessarily well controlled DENTAL MANAGEMENT for ANGINA PECTORIS • mild most dental tx • moderate simple tx vitals, sedation vitals, sedation ± prophylactic NGN vitals, sedation + routine tx prophylactic NGN oxygen complex tx HOSPITALIZATION DENTAL MANAGEMENT for ANGINA PECTORIS • severe simple tx vitals, sedation + prophylactic NGN • routine-complex tx HOSPITALIZATION Surgical Treatment • Coronary Artery By-Pass Graft (CABG) – Saphenous vein – Internal mammary artery – Radial artey Dental Considerations CABG • The CABG is not considered a risk condition for BE, therefore antibiotic prophylaxis is not necessary • Avoid use of vasoconstrictor for the first 3 months due to electrical instability of the heart during this period Post-Myocardial Infarction “MI”, “Coronary”, “Heart Attack” Infarction - an area of necrosis in tissue due to ischemia resulting from obstruction of blood flow Prognosis After Infarction • Hospital discharge after 7 days • 50% of survivors are at increased risk of further cardiac events • Without further treatment, 5-15% will die in first year; similar number will have reinfarction • With treatment, morbidity and mortality markedly reduced (<3% in GUSTO trial) MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION • • • • • • CAUSES of DEATH from MI ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest congestive heart failure cardiac tamponade thromboembolic complications MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION • history of past -MI • best to wait >6 months= NO ROUTINE CARE! If so, AHA prophylaxis • physical status, Rxs, vital signs, fatigue, CHF, cardiac reserve • CLOSE MONITORING !! • MEDICAL CONSULTATION MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION • short, non-stressful appointments schedule at BEST time for patient • changes>>>> STOP- POSTPONE dental tx sedation : N2O2 • good anesthesia, pain control, anxiety reduction, etc. • prophylactic oxygen ( nasal cannula) ± NGN; ALWAYS have NGN available! MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION • • • • • • NO EPINEPHRINE anticoagulants( Coumadin) PT or INR, BT arrhythmias CHF Rxs: side-effects, interactions, adjustment