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Chest Pain On The Acute Medical Take Acute Block UHCW September 25 th 2014. Dr. Adam Iqbal Clinical Teaching Fellow UHCW NHS Trust. Objectives. By the end of this session you should be able to: List the common and serious causes of chest pain presenting to the acute medical take
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Chest Pain On The Acute Medical TakeAcute Block UHCWSeptember 25th 2014 Dr. Adam Iqbal Clinical Teaching Fellow UHCW NHS Trust
Objectives By the end of this session you should be able to: List the common and serious causes of chest pain presenting to the acute medical take Recognise the clinical features of (interactive discussion): Acute coronary syndrome, aortic dissection, pericarditis Pulmonary embolism, pneumothorax Exacerbation of COPD & acute asthma Recognise radiological features of: Pericardial effusion Pneumothorax Pulmonary embolism Discuss management of acute coronary syndromes (didactic teaching)
A B C D E 1. IDENTIFY problem 2. CORRECT abnormalities …then PROCEED History: SQITAS Problem solving PMHx DA SHx, FHx Clinical Assessment Which system? Cardiac Respiratory Musculoskeletal Gastrointestinal Neurological
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of ACS …
HISTORY Sudden onset central chest pain “Squeezing, tight, crushing, pressure, dull ache” Radiation – neck, jaw, arms Typically severe (subjective!) Precipitated by exertion, relieved by rest (but beware unstable disease) Sweaty, nauseous, collapse DM, smoker, IHD, male, age, FHx, alcohol, HTN, PVD, renal failure (Beware atypical presentation in women, DM, elderly) CLINICAL EXAMINATION Usually normal unless complications May be some evidence of risk factors: PVD (i.e. bypasses, tissue loss), DM (fingerprick), tar staining, hypertensive changes (retinal, bruits), arcus Clinical Features of ACS …
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of Aortic Dissection
HISTORY Sudden onset severe central chest pain “Tearing” Radiation – arms, back May ‘migrate’ Neurological symptoms Autoimmune rheumatic disorders, Ehlers-Danlos, Marfan’s, HTN, trauma, recent instrumentation of aorta CLINICAL EXAMINATION Tachycardic, raised BP Brachial pulse discrepancy Proximal extension: murmur (AR), cardiac tamponade/ischaemia Distal extension: renal failure, visceral, limb, or spinal ischaemia Clinical Features of Aortic Dissection
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of Pericarditis
HISTORY Sharp central chest pain Worsened by movement, breathing, and lying down (relieved by sitting forwards) Hx of recent cardiothoracic insult (surgery, radiotx, trauma) or MI (AMI, Dressler’s) Recent viral, bacterial, tuberculous illness CLINICAL EXAMINATION Pericardial rub Features of pericardial effusion Haemodynamic compromise Features of acute heart failure (myocarditis or constrictive pericarditis) Clinical Features of Pericarditis
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of Pulmonary Embolism PEs can be small, massive, or multiple
HISTORY Dyspnoea (chronic or sudden onset) Chest pain (+/- pleuritic) Cough (+/- haemoptysis) Risk factors: prev VTE, smoker, pregnancy, immobility, recent surgery, dehydrated, FHx VTE, drugs, OCP CLINICAL EXAMINATION Tachypnoea, tachycardia Raised JVP, hypotension Features of pulm HTN Minimal chest signs Peripheral DVT Clinical Features of Pulmonary Embolism PEs can be small, massive, or multiple
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of Pneumothorax
HISTORY Sudden onset unilateral pleuritic chest pain or progressively increasing breathlessness Cough Young male (M:F ratio 6:1), tall, COPD, asthma, ca lung, suppurative lung disease, instrumentation (!!) CLINICAL EXAMINATION Tachypnoea, desaturation Haemodynamic compromise if tension Reduced expansion, tympanic PN Mediastinal shift Clinical Features of Pneumothorax
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of COPD Exacerbation
HISTORY Cough, Phlegm, Fever Chest pain (tightness, sharp/pleuritic) SOB, wheeze Smoker, known obstructive spirometry, under resp physician, frequent exacerbations CLINICAL EXAMINATION Tar staining, CO2 flap, tachypnoea, tachycardia, cyanosis, hyperexpanded chest, accessory muscle use, resonant PN, crackles, bronchial sounds, wheeze, prolonged expiratory phase Clinical Features of COPD Exacerbation
HISTORY CLINICAL EXAMINATION Clinical Features of Acute Asthma
HISTORY SOB Cough Wheeze Phlegm (Diurnal variation, triggers) Hx of atopy DA: beta-blockers, NSAIDs CLINICAL EXAMINATION Tachypnoea, tachycardia Widespread wheeze Accessory muscle use Desaturation, cyanosis, see-sawing Clinical Features of Acute Asthma
Acute Coronary Syndrome • Make the diagnosis ! • Manage cause / condition / complications ACS Angina UA NSTEMI STEMI
Angina Unstable Angina Exertional Relieved by rest ± ECG changes ( ST depression, T wave inversion) Troponin negative Can occur at rest Crescendo ± ECG changes ( ST depression, T wave inversion) Troponin negative
NSTEMI STEMI Troponin +ve ± ECG changes (ST depression/ T wave inversion) Troponin +ve ST elevation 2mm in 2 consecutive chest leads 1mm in 2 limb leads New onset LBBB
Acute Management of ACS • A-E assessment (ECG vital) • Identify Problem > Correct > Reassess > Proceed • Monitoring (!!) • UA / NSTEMI • Aspirin 300mg, Clopidogrel 300mg, Clexane 1mg/kg SC BD • STEMI • 2222 (!!) • Aspirin 300mg, Ticagrelor 180mg • Manage symptoms / complications • Beta-blockers prevent arrhythmias (!!) • GTN (SL or infusion) • Analgesia (diamorphine 2.5-10mg IV) & Antiemetic (metoclopramide 10mg IV) • Careful clinical assessment (arrhythmias, heart failure, RVF etc) • Oxygen ONLY IF HYPOXIC
ABSOLUTE CONTRAINDICATIONS • Active bleeding or GI bleed < 4/52 • Suspected aortic dissection • Surgery/Trauma/Head injury < 2/52 • Recent non-embolic stroke <6/12 • RELATIVE CONTRAINDICATIONS • HTN • Prolonged CPR (>5min) • Pregnancy • Therapeutic anticoagulation • Retinopathy
Investigations Electrocardiogram – serial Blood tests Full Blood Count / U&E Lipid Profile / BMs Clotting screen Troponin (in this trust 3hrs & 6hrs) Chest radiograph Echocardiogram (LV function) Coronary angiogram > PCI Myocardial perfusion scan
Post Event management Lifestyle & risk factor modification Smoking cessation Dietary changes Exercise Diabetes & dyslipidaemia HTN Secondary prevention ACE-I Beta-Blocker Statins Dual anti-platelet therapy for 1yr, aspirin for life Cardiac rehabilitation Clinic follow up & repeat echocardiography
Summary • Chest pain is the single most common presenting complaint on the acute take • Know how to recognise the serious (& rare!) • Reassure the patient • Bear in mind causes not discussed here i.e. GI • Apply your clinical reasoning (as opposed to questioning by rote) & you will recognise what you have never seen • Be thorough, systematic, logical and … keep an open mind!