STEMI Flashcards

1
Q

Define Acute coronary syndrome

A

A collection of syndromes resulting from acute myocardial ischaemia. Includes: Unstable angina, NSTEMI, and STEMI

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2
Q

Describe the presentation of acute coronary syndrome

A

Acute central crushing chest pain >20 min duration Sweating, nausea, dyspnoea, palpitations

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3
Q

How may presentation of MI differ in elderly and diabetic patients?

A

They may experience ‘Silent’ MIs. These may present with syncope, pulmonary oedema, vomiting, acute confusion, stroke, and diabetic hyperglycaemic states.

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4
Q

Name 3 conditions that mimic the pain of acute coronary syndrome

A

Pericarditis Dissecting aortic aneurysm Pulmonary embolism Oesophageal reflux, spasm, rupture (Boerhavve syndrome) Biliary tract disease Perforated peptic ulcer Pancreatitis

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5
Q

Categorise acute coronary syndrome on treatment

A

STEMI: requires reperfusion therapy on presentation NSTEMI and UA: not treated with thrombolysis

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6
Q

Differentiate the types of acute coronary syndrome

A

STEMI: ST-elevation or LBBB on 12-lead ECG, with positive cardiac markers NSTEMI: No ST-elevation, with positive cardiac markers UA: No ST-elevation, with negative cardiac markers *Cardiac markers: Troponin I, CK-MB

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7
Q

Outline the initial emergency management of acute coronary syndrome

A

Transfer to CCU/HDU for continuous ECG monitoring and access to defibrillator if needed. ABC assessment: exclude hypotension, locate murmurs, identify and treat acute pulmonary oedema IV access 12-lead ECG Diamorphine 2.5-10mg IV PRN + metoclopramide 10mg Oxygen (controlled oxygen therapy 2-5L/min if hypoxic) Nitroglycerine 2 puffs sublingual (unless hypotensive) Aspirin 300mg PO

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8
Q

Outline the initial investigations for acute coronary syndrome

A

FBC and U&Es: maintain K+ between 4-5 mmol/L LFTs Glucose Lipids CK-MB: abnormal if 2x upper-limit of normal Troponin I* Portable CXR: Cardiomegaly and pulmonary oedema

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9
Q

What is the criteria for prior MI?

A

Any one of the following: -Pathological Q waves in absence of non-ischaemic cause -Imaging evidence of region loss of myocardium that is thinned and fails to contract, in the absence of non-ischaemic cause -Pathological finds of a prior MI

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10
Q

Describe the presentation of STEMI

A

Severe chest pain, may radiate to left arm, neck, jaw Not relieved by sublingual GTN >20 min duration Autonomic: Pale, clammy, sweating, weak pulse and hypotensive, brady- or tachycardia Atypical: Dyspnoea, fatigue, epigastric pain, syncope

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11
Q

What ECG changes are seen in STEMI?

A

ST elevation or new LBBB (V1 and V6) May have T wave inversion or pathological Q waves

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12
Q

Describe the evolution of STEMI on ECG

A

Mins to hrs: ST elevation and hyperacute T wave Hrs to 1 day: T wave inversion and Q wave 1 week: Coronary T wave Months: Q wave

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13
Q

Which vessel is occluded in the following?

A

Anteroseptal STEMI: Left anterior descending artery

ST elevation of:

  • 0.2+ mV in leads V1-3
  • 0.1+ mV in all other leads
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14
Q

Which vessel is occluded in the following?

A

High lateral STEMI: Left diagonal branch of LAD

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15
Q

Which vessel is occluded in the following?

A

Posterior STEMI: Posterior descending artery

Inverted changes seen in V1-3

Posterior leads V7-9 indicated

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16
Q

Which vessel is occluded in the following?

A

Inferior MI: Right coronary artery

17
Q

What vessel is occluded in an anteroseptal STEMI, and which leads would be abnormal?

A

Left anterior descending artery V1-4

18
Q

What vessel is occluded in a lateral STEMI, and which leads would be abnormal

A

Left marginal artery V5-6

19
Q

What vessel is occluded in a high-lateral STEMI, and which leads would be abnormal?

A

Left circumflex artery I and aVL

20
Q

What vessel is occluded in an inferior STEMI, and which leads would be abnormal?

A

Right coronary artery II, III, aVF

21
Q

Which lead would be abnormal in a right ventricular STEMI?

A

VR4

22
Q

Which leads would be abnormal in a posterior STEMI

A

V7-9 or V1-3 reciprocal ST depression

23
Q

Outline the medical intervention for STEMI

A

Diamorphine 2.5-10mg IV PRN + Metoclopramide 10mg Oxygen (controlled oxygen therapy 2-5L/min if hypoxic) Nitroglycerine: 2 puffs sublingual (unless hypotensive) Aspirin 300mg PO Correct electrolyte imbalances: Low K+ and Mg2+ may be arrhthmogenic. Maintain K+ between 4-5 mmol/L Limit infarct size -Beta blockers: give early to all patients unless contraindicated -ACEi: given within 24hr of presentation -Reperfusion: Thrombolysis or PCI

24
Q

List the absolute contraindications for beta-blockers

A

HR <60 SBP <100 Moderate to severe heart failure AV conduction defect Severe airway disease

25
Q

List the relative contraindications for beta-blockers

A

Asthma CCBs and/or beta-blockers Critical limb ischaemia Large inferior MI involving right ventricle

26
Q

List 3 complications of STEMI

A

Sudden death Pump failure/pericarditis Ruptured papillary muscle or septum Embolism Aneurysm/arrhythmias -LV aneurysm: persistent ST elevation with LV failure Dressler’s syndrome: secondary autoimmune pericarditis 2-6wk post MI

27
Q

What are the benefits of reperfusion therapy for MI

A

Lowers: Mortality* LV dysfunction Heart failure Cardiogenic shock Arrhythmias

28
Q

What are the indications for Percutaneous coronary intervention?

A

All patients with chest pain and ST elevation/new LBBB Thrombolysis contraindicated Rescue PCI: if patient symptomatic post-thrombolysis or develops cardiogenic shock ST elevation of > 2mm in 2 or more consecutive anterior leads (V1-V6), or ST elevation of greater than 1mm in greater than 2 consecutive inferior leads (II, III, avF, avL)

29
Q

Name 3 complications of percutaneous coronary intervention

A

Bleeding from puncture site Stroke Recurrent infarction Need for emergency CABG Death

30
Q

What scoring system is used to assess operative mortality in cardiac surgery?

A

EuroSCORE

31
Q

When is thrombolysis used as reperfusion therapy?

A

A primary PCI programme is unavailable Patient cannot undergo cathertisation without delay (within 90 min of pain onset, ideally 60)

32
Q

Outline the indications for thrombolysis

A

Typical history of chest pain within previous 12h Plus one of: ST elevation in 2 consecutive ECG leads - >1mm in limb leads or >2mm in chest leads New LBBB on ECG Posterior infarct (V7-9 or reciprocal depression in V1-3)

33
Q

What drug is used for thrombolysis?

A

Reteplase IV: Tissue plasminogen activator *Increased risk of haemorrhage Streptokinase

34
Q

List the absolute contraindications for thrombolysis

A

Haemorrhagic or ischaemic stroke <6 months CNS neoplasia Recent trauma or surgery GI bleed <1 month Bleeding disorder Aortic dissection

35
Q

List the relative contraindications for thrombolysis

A

Warfarin Pregnancy Advanced liver disease Infective endocarditis

36
Q

List 3 complications of thrombolysis

A

Bleeding (up to 10%) Hypotension Intracranial haemorrhage Reperfusion arrhythmias Systemic embolisation Allergic reaction Increased risk of cardiac rupture in elderly patients*

37
Q

Outline a discharge plan following a STEMI

A

Aspirin + Prasugrel ACEi Beta-blocker/CCB Statin GTN Modifiable risk factors: Manage lipids, diabetes, BP, smoking, diet and weight control 1 month off work Inform DVLA - no driving for 4 weeks, 1 week if successful angioplasty