Chest Pain Evaluation Jimmy Klemis, MD

Chest Pain Evaluation
Jimmy Klemis, MD
Differential Diagnosis
• Cardiovascular
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Angina (unstable, MI)
Aortic dissection
Pericarditis
PE
Pulmonary HTN
AS/HOCM
• Pulmonary
– Pneumothorax
– Pleurisy/Pneumonia
– Tumor
• Other
– Herpes Zoster
– Anxiety/functional d/o
• Gastrointestinal
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GERD/Esophagitis
Esophageal Spasm
Mallory-Weiss tear
Peptic Ulcer/Gastritis
Pancreatitis
Biliary dz
• Musculoskeletal
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costochondritis
trauma (rib fx, strain, mets)
cervical disk dz
arthritis of shoulder/spine
Don’t miss
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Acute Coronary Syndrome/MI
Aortic dissection
Pulmonary Embolism
Pneumothorax
History
• “PQRST”
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Provokes: exertion/rest, pleuritic, swallowing, positional
Palliates: rest, meds(NTG, antiulcer), position
Quality: sharp/somatic dull/visceral
Region: substernal/epigastric/shoulder/etc
Radiation: arm/neck/jaw, back
Severity
Timing: new, chronic, worsening
• Risk factors: CV- age, tobacco, FHx, DM/lipid/ HTN;
other- DVT/PE, marfans/pregnant, EtOH, NSAIDs
• PMHx: prior CV w/u & Rx, GI hx
Physical Exam
• General/VS: HR/BP/RR/Sa02/ distress
• HNT: jvd/hjr, tracheal dev, carotid pulse
• CV: palpation (RV heave/apical impulse/
dyskinetic segments), S1/2, S3/4, murmur
(AI,AS, MR, TR, VSD), rub
• RESP: symmetry, infiltrate/effusion, rales,
wheezing, friction rub, palpation
• ABD: ausc/BS, palp/peritoneal signs,
bruits/masses
• EXT: pulses/symmetry, edema, bruits
• Skin: rash/zoster, cool/clammy
Aortic Dissection
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Hx: sudden, severe “ripping” pain in ant chest, may radiate to back
Etiology
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HTN
Trauma (blunt, cath/surgery)
Pregnancy
Connective tissue (Marfans, Ehlers-Danlos)
Clinical:
– HTN, BP both arms not equal, distal pulses diminished, AR murmur,
cardiac tamponade, neurologic defecits
– Mortality high
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Diagnosis:
– CXR – wide mediastinum
– CT, TEE, MRI
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Treatment
– Beta blockade (Esmolol/Labetalol) + Nipride
– Type A/Proximal – surgery Type B/Distal - medical
CXR showing wide mediastinum and
enlargement of aortic knob c/w interval
CXR 3yr prior;
CT scan showing flap of aortic dissection
Pulmonary Embolus
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Presentation:, dyspnea/tachypnea , tachycardia, pleuritic CP/cough +/hypotension, hemoptysis
Risk
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surgery/trauma
obesity, smoking
oral contraceptives, pregnant/post partum
malignancy
immobilization/illness (ICU/stroke/CHF/Pneumonia)
indwelling central line
PE: hypoxia/A-a gradient ( although may be Nl), anxious, RV strain,
tachycardia/tachypnea,
Diagnosis
– ECG S1Q3T3 (<7%) LAB – DDimer (nonspecific); CLINICAL
– CXR – oligemia (Westermark’s sign) infarct (Hampton’s hump)
– CT (PE protocol), V/Q scan, Pulmonary Angiogram
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Treatment
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anticoagulation/thrombolysis, interventional/surgical mgmt
“Westermarks sign”
Oligemia in R Lobe,
with angio showing
occlusve R PA embolus
CT with massive PE
in R/L PA
“Hampton’s hump”
wedge shaped density
In lung periphery indicating
Pulm infarction
Pictures: Braunwauld, Heart Disease, 6th ed
PE- ECG S1Q3T3
Pneumothorax
• Clinical – dyspnea, pleuritic CP
• Physical findings – tracheal deviation,
absence of breath sounds
• Risk – recent central line, ventilator,
trauma, spontaneous/cough/etc
• Dx: CXR
• Rx: if small, stable can observe; repeat
CXR; pneumodart/chest tube
Pneumothorax
Acute Coronary Syndrome
ACS - Evaluation
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History
Physical
ECG
Lab/Cardiac Markers
Treatment
Myocardial O2 Supply & Demand
• Supply
– Coronary Blood Flow
• diastolic perfusion
pressure
• coronary vascular
resistance
– O2 carrying capacity
• Demand
– Wall Tension
• Pressure x radius/2h
– Heart Rate
– Contractility
Unstable Angina/NSTEMI
• Causes
– nonocclusive thrombus on pre-existing
plaque
– dynamic obstruction (spasm or constriction)
– progressive mechanical obstruction
– inflammation +/- infection
– “secondary” UA (O2 supply/demand)
• supply↓:hypotension/ anemia/ hypoxia
• demand↑ : fever/ tachycardia/ HTN
History
• Chest/epigastric pain/discomfort
– pressure/heaviness/tightness/burning
– unexplained indigestion/epigastric pain
– nausea/vomiting/diaphoresis
– dyspnea
• Flash Pulmonary edema
– should raise susp for ischemia
Not characteristic of Angina
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Pleuritic pain (i.e., sharp or knife-like pain brought on by respiratory
movements or cough)
Primary or sole location of discomfort in the middle or lower
abdominal region
Pain that may be localized at the tip of 1 finger, particularly over the
left ventricular (LV) apex
Pain reproduced with movement or palpation of the chest wall or
arms
Constant pain that lasts for many hours
Very brief episodes of pain that last a few seconds or less
Pain that radiates into the lower extremities
HOWEVER – 7-22% of pt with ACS can have concurrent findings
(chest wall tenderness 7% pleuritic 13% sharp/stabbing pain 22%)
Source: 2002 ACC/AHA Unstable Angina guidelines
Likelihood of ACS
2002 ACC/AHA Unstable Angina guideline
UA/NSTEMI - Presentation
ECG findings
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ST Elevation (injury)
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DDx: MI, Pericarditis, early repolarization, vasospasm, LV aneurysm
≥ 2 contiguous leads reperfusion (lytic/PCI)
ST Depression (ischemia)
T wave abnormalities
– hyperacute: hyper K, early MI
– inversions: DDx: ischemia, pericardial dz, myocarditis, CNS, drugs (TCA,
phenothiazine)
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Q waves
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pathologic: >.04 wide, 25% of total qrs height
precordial R wave progression (should increase V1-V5/6)
Special
– Posterior MI: early transition (tall R V1 or V2, ST depression)
– RV infarct: ST elevation V3R V4R
– new LBBB
– less than 50% of acute MI have clear ECG findings on 1st ECG, 10% of pt with
MI may not show ECG changes
Acute MI – evolution of ECG
Morris, BMJ April 6, 2002
Q waves
Pathologic Q waves in inferior
and anterior leads;
-q waves can occur within 1-2hrs
of acute MI but usually 12-24 hrs
Morris, BMJ April 6, 2002
T wave abnormalities
Channer, et al. BMJ April 27,2002
T wave inversion suggestive of anterior
ischemia. TWI may be normal in III, aVR,
and V1 if associated with predominantly
negative QRS complex.
T wave - hyperacute
Hyperacute T waves
- usually occur early in MI
and precede ST elevation; DDx
includes hyperK. if uncertain,
repeat ECG
Morris, BMJ April 6, 2002
ST elevation/reciprocal changes
Acute Inferior MI with reciprocal ST depression
reciprocal changes seen in 70% inferior and 30% anterior acute MI
strongly suggestive of acute MI with PPV 90%
source: Morris, BMJ April 6 2002
ST depression
ST depression can initially be a subtle
flattening of the ST segment, or may present
as classic horizontal or downsloping changes
with severe ischemia.
amount of ST depression usually relates to
size of R wave
DDx includes LVH and Digoxin
Channing, et al. BMJ April 27, 2002
LBBB and Acute MI
Acute MI in pt with preexisting
LBBB
criteria for acute MI in face
of old/known LBBB include
-ST elevation of >4-5mm
-“inappropriate concordance”
of ST elevation, seen here in
V5-6 (usually ST/T are opposite
QRS in LBBB, i.e. discordant)
-NEW LBBB is ACUTE MI until
proven otherwise
Edhouse, et al. BMJ April 20 2002
prev anterior MI with LV aneurysm, seen
commonly after ant MI, may be palpable
Pericarditis with diffuse ST elevation
and PR depression
BMJ April 20, 2002
Benign early repolarization in healthy,
young, esp AA males. most pronounced
in V4
50 WM with severe CP x1hr
hyperacute T waves, early MI
Cardiac Markers
Initial
Peak
Normal
Myoglobin
1-4hr
6-7hr
24hr
CK-MB
3-12hr
24hr
48-72hr Also elevated with sk
muscle/CPK
Troponin I
3-12hr
24hr
5-10d
Nonspecific
Highly sensitive/
specific
Treatment of ACS
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Initial
– ASA/Plavix
– Nitroglycerin
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SLor spray/paste/patch and IV if no relief (5-200mg/min)
avoid if hypotensive , viagra w/in 24hr,or RV infarct
– Morphine SO4
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2-4 mg IV
– Beta-Blockers
• first dose IV if ongoing/recurrent pain; followed by oral dose
• avoid if HR <70, acute LV dysfxn,caution with inf MI/RV
• can substitute Nondihydro CCB if asthma//cocaine/contra
– Heparin/LMWH
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Lovenox 1mg/kg SQ q12 (max 120 bid, caution in renal failure)
– ACEI
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if HTN persists despite above Rx
ACS – special considerations
• Cocaine/vasospasm
– NTG/CCB/Ativan, can also have thrombotic
occlusion – clinical/resolution of CP suggests
spasm
• RV Infarct
– R sided ECG V3R V4R
– hypotension with NTG/BB
– Rx with volume/inotropes
Treatment of ACS
• Reperfusion eligible – thrombolysis/PTCA
• admit telemetry/ICU
• monitor for complications
– arrythmia
• Ventricular tachycardia – (K>4, Mg>2; lidocaine/amiodarone)
• Bradycardia/ AV block - (atropine/ pacemaker)
– shock
• LV dysfxn – inotropes (Dobutamine/Milrinone) + pressors
(Dopamine) + IABP if indicated
• RV – volume, avoid NTG/BB + above Rx
• Cath lab for urgent reperfusion
– Mechanical
• acute MR, VSD, free wall rupture (3-7d)
Acute Reperfusion - Thrombolysis
• Criteria
– new ST elevation in ≥2 contiguous leads
• New LBBB
• RV infarct (V3R, V4R elevation)
• Post infarct (ST dep anterior segments/early trans)
– onset of sxs within 12 hrs (benefit greatest in first 3hrs)
Thrombolysis Contraindications
ACC/AHA revised guidelines for Acute MI
Primary PTCA
• same as thrombolysis as well as
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sxs >12hrs onset with ongoing chest pain
sxs w/in 36hrs + cardiogenic shock
if thrombolysis contraindicated (IIa)
admission/dx to open artery time 90±30min
The real world – 48 F presents to
med ER with chest pain x 6 hrs
Dx: Acute Inferior MI, reciprocal changes – pt taken for emergent cardiac
catheterization and successful PTCA of RCA lesion
81 F Acute/Chronic renal failure, anemia,
and dyspnea/confusion and Troponin I of 4
Dx: probable acute coronary syndrome (fellow) LV aneurysm (staff) – emergent cath
revealed noncritical 3vCAD, exam c/w LV aneurysm
30 F presents with chest pain x 1 wk
Diagnosis: Unstable Angina with ECG suggestive of ischemia with T wave inversions
pt had negative enzymes, normal stress test at high level; discharged
Differential Diagnosis
• Cardiovascular
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Angina (unstable, MI)
Aortic dissection
Pericarditis
PE
Pulmonary HTN
AS/HOCM
• Pulmonary
– Pneumothorax
– Pleurisy/Pneumonia
– Tumor
• Other
– Herpes Zoster
– Anxiety/functional d/o
• Gastrointestinal
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GERD/Esophagitis
Esophageal Spasm
Mallory-Weiss tear
Peptic Ulcer/Gastritis
Pancreatitis
Biliary dz
• Musculoskeletal
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–
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costochondritis
trauma (rib fx, strain, mets)
cervical disk dz
arthritis of shoulder/spine
Conclusions
• Chest Pain does not necessarily = Acute
Coronary Syndrome
• Recognize DDx and clinical manifestations
• PE/Dissection/PTX
• Angina/ACS – myocardial 02 supply and
demand; recognize “secondary angina”
and treat correctable causes
• Reperfusion criteria/contraindications
• Call for help if needed