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TREATMENT of CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA AND acute coronary syndrome (unstable angina, nstemi, stemi). Dr. Zahoor. CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA. Clinical presentation - Chronic Stable angina Chest pain ( Angina ) on exertion Pain lasts for 5-10 minute Cardiac enzyme – normal
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TREATMENT of CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA AND acute coronary syndrome (unstable angina, nstemi, stemi) Dr. Zahoor
CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA Clinical presentation - Chronic Stable angina • Chest pain ( Angina ) on exertion • Pain lasts for 5-10 minute • Cardiac enzyme – normal • ECG – ST depression, T inversion maybe there
CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA • Chronic Stable Angina Treatment 1- General Treat the risk factors i) Stop Smoking ii) Treatment of diabetes iii) Treatment of Hypertension iv) Treatment of lipid disorders
CHRONIC STABE ANGINA General Treatment (Cont) v) Diet – Low saturated and transfats vi) Treat obesity vii) Treatment for anemia viii) Treat hyperthyroidisim
CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA 2- Drug Therapy – Stable Angina i) Sublingual nitroglycerin – GTN 0.3 – 0.6mg maybe repeated at 5min interval Side effect – headache Prophylatic use of GTN GTN can be used prior to activity that evokes angina
CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA Important • If chest pain persist more than 10 min despite 2-3 GTN, patient should report to the nearest medical facility for evaluation of possible unstable angina or acute myocardial infarction (MI)
ANGINA PECTORIS Long term treatment – Stable Angina Long acting nitrates • Isosorbite dinitrate 5-30 mg TID orally • Sustained action (slow release) 40mg Bid
CHRONIC STABLE ANGINA • Skin patches of glycerol nitrate – 0.1 to 0.6 mg/hour Apply in the morning and remove at bedtime Side Effects of nitrate – headache, light headedness, tachycardia
ANGINA PECTORIS – Stable Angina Beta Blockers • Beta I selective agent e.g. Tenormin , Bisoprolol • Dose should be titrated to keep resting heart rate of 50-60 beats/min • Side Effects – Bronchospasm, depressed left ventricular function, depression, masking hypoglycemia in diabetes mellitus
BETA BLOCKERS Contra indications • Chronic severe heart disease • AV block • Bronchial asthma
ANGINA PECTORIS Calcium antagoniste.g. verapamil, diltiazem • They are used for stableangina, unstable angina, and coronary vasospasm • Combination of calcium antagonist with other anti angina is beneficial but verapamilshould not be used with beta blocker as both have negative Inotropic effect
ANGINA PECTORIS Aspirin • Aspirin 80 – 325mg/day • It reduces the incidence of MI in chronic stable angina • Contra indication - GI bleeding, Allergy • Alternate (when patient can not tolerate aspirin) Clopidogrel (plavix) 75mg/day
ANGINA PECTORIS • ACE inhibitors (angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors) e.g. captopril, enalopril • ACE inhibitors are indicated for patients with coronary artery disease when ejection fraction is less than 40%, hypertension, diabetes mellitus or chronic renal disease
ANGINA PECTORIS • PCI – Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (Mechanical Revascularization) - Coronary angioplasty - Stenting • PCI is more effective than medical therapy for relief of angina symptoms but does not reduce the risk of MI
ANGINA PECTORIS PCI • With Coronary Angioplasty Chances of Restenosis is up to 30-45% within 6 months • Stent – There are two types of intracoronary stent: i) Bare metal – Chances of restenosis 30% at 6 month ii) Drug eluting stent – restenosis usually not there, but late stent thrombosis can rarely occur Restenosis is prevented by prolonged anti platelet therapy – Aspirin life long, plavix (Clopidogrel) – 75mg/day for one year
ANGINA PECTORIS Coronary Artery bypass surgery (CABG) Indication • In severe coronary artery disease (CAD) e.g. left main coronary artery or triple vessel disease (LAD, circumflex, right coronary artery) with left ventricle function impairment • CABG is preferred over PCI in diabetes when there is coronary artery disease with triple vessel disease
ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME [ACS] • Unstable angina, NSTEMI and STEMI are called acute coronary syndrome • Unstable angina and NSTEMI have similar mechanism, clinical presentation and treatment strategies • We will discuss unstable angina and NSTEMI first, then treatment of STEMI
UNSTABLE ANGINA Clinical presentation - Unstable angina • Chest pain at rest or minimal activity • Pain lasts for more than 20mins • Cardiac enzyme – normal • ECG – ST depression, T inversion maybe there
NSTEMI Clinical Presentation of NSTEMI • Chest pain at rest or minimal activity • Pain lasts for more than 20mins • Cardiac enzyme – Troponin – T & I increased • ECG – ST depression and or T wave inversion (No ST elevation, No Q wave development) Note – Troponin T & I are more specific and sensitive markers of myocardial damage
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Treatment • Aspirin 81mg - 4 tablet stat – chewable then 81mg/day orally • Plavix (Clopidogrel) 75mg – 4 tablet statthen 75mg/day • Low molecular weight heparin – Enoxaprin 1mg/kg sc 12 hourly NOTE – Fibrinolytic therapy is not given to the patient with unstable angina/NSTEMI
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Treatment (cont) Anti-ischemic therapy • Nitro glycerin 0.3 - 0.6 mg sublingually, repeat 3 doses given five minute apart • If chest discomfort persist then give IV nitro glycerin
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Treatment (cont) --Beta blocker are given. • If beta blockers are contra indicated e.g. Bronchospasm then give long acting calcium antagonist e.g. verapamil or diltiazem
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Additional Recommendations • Admit the patient to a unit with continuous ECG monitoring - CCU • Bed rest • If pain morphine sulphate 2-5 mg IV • Atrovastatin (Lipitor) – lowers lipids – initially 80mg/day (it is HmG – Co A reductase inhibitor) • ACE inhibitors
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Invasive therapy • PCI • CABG • Early invasive strategy is recommended for patients - Recurrent ischemia at rest or minimal exertion - Elevated cardiac enzyme – Troponin T & I
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Early invasive strategy is recommended for Patients (cont) : - New ST segment depression - LVEF less than 40% - Hemodynamic instability e.g. hypotension
UNSTABLE ANGINA AND NSTEMI Long term management • Stop smoking (if smoker) • Optimal weight achievement • Diet – low and saturated and transfats • Regular exercise Drug treatment • Aspirin – long term • Plavix • Beta blocker • Statins ( Lipitor ) • ACE inhibitors
We will discuss ST ELEVATION MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION (STEMI) • Diagnosis of STEMI is based on - Pain – more severe and persistent, not fully relieved by GTN, often accompanied by nausea, sweating - ECG – ST elevation, followed by T inversion than Q wave development, over several hours
Acute Transmural Anterior MI ECG is showing ST elevation in lead I, aVL, V2, V3, V4, V5, and V6 There are Q waves in lead V3 V4 and V5
ST ELEVATION MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION (STEMI) - Cardiac biomarkers – Troponin T and I are increased, they are highly specific for myocardial injury. - CKMB Isoenzyme increased • Echocardiography It shows infarct associated regional wall motion abnormalities
TREATMENT OUTLINE FOR STEMI Initial therapy Goals are • Relief pain • Reperfusion therapy - PCI - Thrombolytic therapy • Prevent/treat arrhythmias
TREATMENT OUTLINE FOR STEMI • Aspirin 81mg 4 tablet chewable then oral therapy • Reperfusion therapy 1) PCI is done within 2 hours and is preferred as it is more effective (when facilities are available) If PCI not available, IV fibrinolysis 2) Fibrinolysis (tPA, streptokinase) gives most benefit when given with in 3 hours after MI, but can be used up to 12 hours
TREATMENT OUTLINE FOR STEMI • Admit in CCU, continuous ECG monitoring • IV line for emergency arrhythmia treatment • Pain control – morphine sulphate 2-4mg IV slowly over 5-10mins • If pain continues give I/V GTN • Oxygen 2-4 liters/min by nasal cannula
TREATMENT OUTLINE FOR STEMI • Soft diet • Stole softener • Beta Blocker – they reduce oxygen demand limit infarct size, reduce motility Contra indications of Beta Blockers - Systolic blood pressure less than 95mmHg - Heart rate less than 50/min - A : V block - History of Bronchospasm
TREATMENT OUTLINE FOR STEMI • Heparin is given after thromlytic therapy • ACE inhibitors
COMPLICATION OF STEMI • Ventricular arrhythmias -- Ventricular Ectopic -- Ventricular tachycardia -- Ventricular fibrillation • Supraventricular arrhythmias -- Atrial fibrillation -- Atrial flutter -- Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia • AV Block -- Due to AV node ischemia