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Clinical Cases: Chest Pain and Syncope. How do we make diagnoses and decisions?. Pattern recognition. An 18 year old college student comes to the ER saying “I’ve had a fever and a terrible headache since this morning, and now my neck is stiff”.
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Pattern recognition • An 18 year old college student comes to the ER saying “I’ve had a fever and a terrible headache since this morning, and now my neck is stiff”. • A 7 year old child presents with 3 weeks of blurred vision, polydipsia, polyuria and weight loss.
Pattern recognition • Most likely diagnosis based on the patient’s presenting symptoms and your knowledge and experience • History, exam and labs are tested to see if they fit this diagnosis • Alternate diagnoses are excluded • More often used by ‘experts’
Logical reasoning • A 62 y.o. woman reports gradually worsening cough and shortness of breath. • A 55 year old man comes in with a 2 month history of diarrhea and weight loss.
Data gathered • List of diagnostic possibilities generated and considered • Pathophysiologic: VINDICATE • Organ system • More often used by novices or experts thinking outside of their usual field
V Vascular • I Inflammatory • N Neoplastic • D Degenerative • I Intoxication • C Congenital • A Autoimmune/allergic • T Trauma • E Endocrine
V CHF • I Tuberculosis • N Lung cancer • D COPD • I Pneumonitis from exposed toxin • C Kyphoscoliosis, congenital heart disease • A Asthma, sarcoidosis • T • E
Name the problem Acute - Chronic Sudden - Gradual Onset Intermittent - Continuous Mild - Severe • Identify other key features of patient’s presentation • Test the key features against your differential diagnosis Do these signs and symptoms fit this dx? What doesn’t fit? What else could this be?
Case 1 • You are on call on the first night of your medicine rotation. A 62 year old man with no known history of cardiac disease, whom you admitted this morning with a severe cellulitis of the leg, had the sudden onset of substernal chest pain 15 minutes ago.
O2 • IV • Request ECG and monitor • Page your resident (or ask the nurse to call a “Rapid Response”)
10 Which feature of his history would most increase the likelihood of MI? • Pain radiating to both arms • Male sex • Hyperlipidemia • Diaphoresis
History in acute MI • Increases likelihood of AMI • Pain radiating to both arms > R shoulder > L arm • Syncope (LR 3.0) • Prior MI (LR 1.5-3.0) • Diaphoresis (LR 2.0) • N/V (LR 1.9) • Decreases likelihood of AMI • Pleuritic (LR 0.2) • Reproduced by palpation, sharp or stabbing, or positional (each with LR 0.3)
Wooden Pearl: Chest pain that responds to nitroglycerin is cardiac in origin
Not so fast… • 459 patients presenting to the ED at Johns Hopkins with acute chest pain treated with NTG with subsequent admission • Nitroglycerin relieved pain (at least 50% decrease within 5 minutes) in • 35% of patients with active coronary disease • 41% without active coronary disease
And remember… • 25% of acute infarcts are missed • Atypical symptoms • Dyspnea alone • Indigestion • Atypical chest pain • No symptoms • Elderly • Diabetic • Postoperative
Physical Exam in MI • Often normal • S3, rales, elevated JVP with systolic dysfunction • Other evidence of vascular disease • Carotid bruit • Decreased LE pulses
Physical Exam in MI • Often normal • S3, rales, elevated JVP with systolic dysfunction • Other evidence of vascular disease • Carotid bruit • Decreased LE pulses
Your resident comes in: What else could this be??
Common sources of diagnostic error • Availability bias • The diagnosis that springs to mind: the last lecture you attended or the last patient you saw • Premature closure • Stop thinking about alternate diagnoses once a reasonable cause of symptoms is considered
Chest pain in the hospital: most likely cause • Unstable angina • Pulmonary embolism • Reflux • Anxiety *personal experience
Diagnostic evaluation • VS, heart, lung, LE, screening neuro exam • ECG • Cardiac enzymes • Consider telemetry • Antacid trial • Seriously consider the possibility of pulmonary embolism • Particularly with cancer surgery, ortho surgery • Even more so if not on DVT prophylaxis
Case 2 A 72 year old man with a history of diabetes, hypertension and smoking is brought to the ER with sudden, severe chest pain of 25 minutes duration.
Based on this, what is most likely? • MI • Aortic dissection • Pericarditis • Non-CV
Prevalence in ED patients with Chest Pain • Unstable angina, MI 16-28% • Pericarditis ~2% • Aortic dissection .003% • Non-cardiovascular 72-84%
What is most likely? • What else can’t we miss? • High mortality (aortic dissection 1% per hour) • Treatable early (with early surgery, survival ~90%) • 20%+ still missed on initial evaluation
Aortic dissection: History • Tearing or ripping chest pain (LR 10.8) • Migrating chest and back pain (LR 7.6) • Sudden onset pain • Marfan’s syndrome • Hypertension
Aortic Dissection: Exam • Any “classic” finding present in only half of all cases • Diastolic murmur (aortic insufficiency) • Unequal blood pressure in limbs (> 20 mm Hg) • Pericardial rub • Elevated JVP (tamponade) • Focal neuro deficit • Shock
Chest x-ray findings • Overall sensitivity 90% • Widened mediastinum (Sn ~ 65%) • Abnormal aortic contour (Sn ~ 70%) • Pleural effusion (Sn ~ 15%)
Consider aortic dissection: • Sudden, tearing, or ripping chest pain, especially with radiation to back • Migrating chest, back abdominal pain • Neuro deficit, pulse deficit, new AI murmur, tamponade • ECG without ST changes in patient you thought was having an MI
Case #3 • A 38 year old woman presents with one day of anterior and left chest pain. • It’s present all the time but is worse with a deep breath. • She is otherwise healthy and has never had anything similar.
Which of the following would support a diagnosis of pericarditis? • Hearing this • Muffled heart sounds • Elevated JVP • All 3
V Aortic dissection, post-MI • I Viral infection • N Lung, breast, lymphoma, melanoma • D Uremia • I Drug induced lupus • C Congenital • A SLE, RA, FMF • T Trauma - blunt, radiation or procedure • E Hypothyroidism
Having detected a pericardial friction rub, which finding would you seek next? • Pulsus alternans • Pulsus paradoxus • Pulsus parvus et tardus
Pericardial Tamponade • Fluid increases intrapericardial pressure • With inspiration, venous return to R ventricle increases; it encroaches onto LV • Chest pain/heaviness/tightness • Symptoms & signs of poor cardiac output • Dyspnea • Elevated JVP • Tachycardia then hypotension
Pulsus paradoxus • Increased venous return with inspiration • Increased fluid in pericardial space restricts the ability of RV to stretch; excess venous return presses on ventricular septum • Decreased LV filling • Decreased blood pressure with inspiration • Also seen with severe asthma
Technique • Inflate BP cuff to above systolic BP and come down veeeerrrrry slowly • Note the pressure at which you begin to hear Korotokoff sounds during expiration • Decreased very slowly • Note the pressure at which you hear sounds in inspiration and expiration • > 10 mm Hg is abnormal
Acute Chest Pain: Suggestive History • Unstable angina/MI • Diffuse tightness, pain or pressure • Radiation to both arms more suggestive than 1 • History of CAD • Nausea • Diaphoresis • Aortic dissection • Sudden onset, ripping or tearing pain • Migrating pain in chest, back, abdomen • Pericarditis • Anterior, often pleuritic • Worse with leaning forward
Acute Chest Pain: Suggestive Exam • Unstable angina/MI • May be normal • S3, hypotension, elevated JVP with heart failure • Aortic dissection • May be normal • Pulse deficit/unequal BPs > 20 mm Hg • Neuro deficit • Suprasternal mass • Pericarditis • Pericardial friction rub • Tachycardia, elevated JVP, + pulsus paradoxus with tamponade
Acute Chest Pain: Next diagnostic steps • ECG • CXR • Cardiac enzymes • Further imaging as guided by history and exam: • Cardiac cath? • Echo to assess wall motion or pericarditis? • CTA or TEE or MRI to assess for dissection?
Suggestive of non-cardiac chest pain • Sharp • Pleuritic • Well circumscribed • Lasting seconds at a time • Lasting hours or days at a time • Unchanged by exertion • Associated with waterbrash (acid in mouth)
Syncope • Transient loss of consciousness, with associated loss of postural tone and spontaneous recovery. • 3% of ED visits and 1% of hospital admissions • History and exam establish diagnosis in about half • About one-third remain unexplained
Key questions in syncope • Is this really syncope? • Seizure will typically have slower return to baseline (postictal state) • Tongue biting, loss of bowel or bladder suggest seizure • Syncope can be associated with tonic clonic movmements • What’s most likely? • What can’t I miss?
Have you ever had syncope? • Yes • No • Abstain
Most common • Neurocardiogenic AKA vasodepressor AKA vasovagal syncope (25-65%) • Autonomic activation causes decreased BP, bradycardia or both • Emotion, carotid sinus pressure, situational • Medications (5-15%) • Vasodilation, bradycardia, volume depletion • Orthostatic syncope (5-10%) • Volume depletion • Autonomic insufficiency
Must not miss • Arrhythmia • Ischemia • Cardiac tamponade • Pulmonary embolism • Major acute blood loss • Valvular disease (aortic or mitral stenosis)
Key questions: • Prodrome? Suggests neurocardiogenic - sudden onset without prodrome suggests arrhythmia • Situation? Prolonged standing, physical or emotional stress, cough, micturition, etc all suggest neurocardiogenic. Syncope with exertion suggests limited cardiac output (bad). • Position? Syncope while standing suggests orthostasis, prolonged standing suggests neurocardiogenic, supine suggests arrhthmia • Any chest pain or dyspnea? • History of cardiac disease? • Family history of cardiac disease or sudden death?
Key exam • VS • Include orthostatic VS • HEENT - tongue laceration suggests seizure • Cardiac - rate and rhythm, evidence of heart failure, evidence of valvular disease • Lung - evidence of heart failure or PE • Neurologic - evidence of stroke