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Cardiac

Cardiac. Community College of Philadelphia Nursing 132 Spring 2007. Anatomy and Physiology Review. Structures Chambers Valves Arteries Physiology Direction of flow Preload Afterload. Coronary Circulation. Structure Epicardium Myocardium Endocardium Chambers Right and Left Atria

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Cardiac

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  1. Cardiac Community College of Philadelphia Nursing 132 Spring 2007

  2. Anatomy and Physiology Review • Structures • Chambers • Valves • Arteries • Physiology • Direction of flow • Preload • Afterload

  3. Coronary Circulation

  4. Structure • Epicardium • Myocardium • Endocardium • Chambers • Right and Left Atria • Right and left Ventricles • Valves • Atrioventricular • Tricuspid - Separates RA from RV • Mitral - Separates LA from the LV • Semilunar • Pulmonic – Separates RV from the Pulmonary Arteries • Aortic – Separates LV from the Aorta

  5. Physiology • Blood flow through the heart • http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/pharm/hyper_heart1.html • Cardiac conduction Automaticity

  6. Electrophysiology • Nodes • Pathway • Automaticity

  7. Cardiac conduction

  8. Basic EKG Interpretation • What is an EKG and what does it measure/record? • PQRST • Measuring boxes • Horizontal measure time: small box 0.04 seconds Large box 0.20 seconds • Vertical voltage: small box 1mm or 0.1 mV large box 5mm or 0.5 mV

  9. P wave • Atrial depolarization • Small, smooth, rounded • No taller than 2.5 mm • No wider than 0.11 sec

  10. Q wave • First downward deflection • Should be less than 0.03 seconds in duration and less than 25% of the R wave • Indicates myocardial infarction

  11. QRS Complex • Represents ventricular depolarization

  12. T wave • Ventricular repolarization • Usually rounded • Should be same direction as QRS • Inverted T waves can be a sign of ischemia • Peaked T waves can be a sign of hyperkalemia

  13. U wave • Small rounded wave not always present, thought to be part of ventricular repolarization

  14. PQRST

  15. Chronic Stable Angina

  16. Angina (Stable Chronic) • Most common sign of ischemic heart disease • Myocardial oxygen demand is increased by exercise, smoking, eating heavy foods, weather extremes, emotional distress, etc… • Atherosclerosis causes progressive fixed narrowing of the arterial lumen • Relieved by rest or pharmacological interventions • Goal is to prolong survival, reduce disease progression

  17. Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) • Unstable Angina (UA) • Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction (NSTEMI) • ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) Penumbra

  18. Unstable Angina (UA) / Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction (NSTEMI) • Imbalance between myocardial oxygen supply and demand • UA occurs at rest without exertion • Reduced myocardial perfusion • Release of biochemical markers vs. no release of biochemical markers

  19. Evaluation and management • Stratification High risk Intermediate Low risk

  20. Immediate Management • History, PE, 12 – Lead EKG, initial cardiac markers • Assign to 1 of 4 categories • Definite or Possible • Cont. EKG monitoring • Cardiac markers • In facility observation • Repeat EKG and cardiac markers 6-12 hours

  21. EKG and cardiac markers normal follow up stress test as outpatient acceptable • Definite ACS admit to hospital – Chest pain unit if available • Hospital Care • Nursing Management • Minimize or eliminate ischemia • Administer meds • Educate • Discharge teaching

  22. ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) • MI occurs as a result of thrombotic occlusion of one or more of the coronary arteries • ******* • CP is most common symptom, severe, doesn’t go away • Diagnosis • EKG • Cardiac markers • PE, History

  23. Ventricular Remodeling – Changes in the size, shape, and thickness of the left ventricle involving both the infarcted and non-infarcted segments of the ventricle. • Penumbra • 1.68 million unique discharges for ACS in 2001, 30% estimate to have STEMI

  24. Management • Pt contact with healthcare system • Initiation of fibrinolytic therapy – < 30 minutes • Balloon inflation for PCI - < 90 minutes

  25. Choice of treatment decided by EM physician and resources of institution and surrounding institutions • Contraindications to fibrinolytics

  26. 12 lead EKG completed and shown to experienced emergency physician WITHIN 10 minutes • Cardiac Markers • Troponin • CK-MB • Myoglobin • Lab results should not delay treatment

  27. Cardiac Enzymes – Troponin, Myoglobin, CK-MB, Total CK

  28. What should be done? • EKG • Lab work • Portable CXR • Oxygen • Nitroglycerin: 3 sublingual 0.04mg, IV if needed **** Phosphodiesterase inhibitor **** • Morphine Sulfate: 2 – 4mg IV • ASA chewed • Beta blocker if not contraindicated • ACE orally within 24 hours of STEMI for anterior infarct, pulm. congestion, LV EF < 40%

  29. Patient Education Before Discharge • Lifestyle changes • Recognizing cardiac symptoms: calling 911 if symptoms not improving • Family education about AED, CPR • Lipid Management • Weight Management • Smoking cessation

  30. Cont. • Antiplatelet Therapy: ASA, Plavix • ACE inhibitor if without contraindications • Beta blockers: except low risk and contraindications • Hypertension Control • Diabetes Management • No Hormone therapy

  31. Cont. • Warfarin Therapy • Physical activity: should be encouraged and prescribed appropriately / Rehab • Follow up care with medical provider

  32. See flow chart

  33. Questions????

  34. Cardiac Catheterization

  35. Percutaneous Coronary Interventions (PCI) • “Cardiac Catheterization” • PTCA (Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty / Angiography) • PCI - Angioplasty, atherectomy, intracoronary stenting • Web site • http://www.heartsite.com/html/cath_4.html

  36. Who undergoes PCI? • Stable CAD • Unstable angina • NSTEMI • STEMI

  37. What is a stent?

  38. http://www.cnn.com/2007/HEALTH/03/23/stents.vs.drugs.ap/index.htmlhttp://www.cnn.com/2007/HEALTH/03/23/stents.vs.drugs.ap/index.html

  39. Preprocedural Management • What do you think? • Informed consent • Consent for CABG • Education • Hold Metformin (Glucophage), insulin etc… NPO status • Lab values - Which ones, and why??

  40. Postprocedural Managment • What do you think? • 12-Lead EKG • Labs - Will CE be elevated? • Hydrate • Anticoagulation per institution • Sheath removal Femstop Manual pressure Vascular closure devices Angioseal

  41. SANDBAG Study • Nurse to patient ratio of 1:1.5 or less maintained during sheath removal • Sheaths removed within 4-6 hours • Medicate for comfort, HOB can be 30 degrees • Allowed to ambulate 8 hours after removal • SANDBAGS ARE NOT EFFECTIVE TO MINIMIZE BLEEDING AND CAUSE DISCOMFOT *****Evidence-Based Practice*******

  42. Complications of PCI • Abrupt Closure • Acute Stent Thrombosis < 1% • Vascular Spasm • NSTEMI • STEMI <1% • Coronary Vessel Perforation • Arrhythmias • Equipment Failure • Contrast-Related Complications • Cerebrovascular Complications • CABG Emergently

  43. Groin Complications • Hematoma • Retroperitoneal bleeding • Arterial thrombosis • Pseudoaneurysm • Arteriovenous fistula

  44. Nursing Management / Diagnosis • Anxiety • Risk of altered myocardial tissue perfusion • Risk of decreased cardiac output • Risk of altered cerebral tissue perfusion • Extracellular fluid volume deficit • Risk of extracellular fluid volume deficit: hemorrhage

  45. Take Home Points ! • PTCA / PCI: What do they stand for? • Reasons for PCI: Evaluate and possibly provide an intervention • Stent, Atherectomy, Angioplasty • Groin complications !!!

  46. Chronic Heart Failure

  47. Heart Failure (HF) • Complex clinical syndrome • HF is not a stand alone diagnosis - it has a cause • What are the causes of HF? • What is HF?

  48. HF is a complex clinical syndrome that can result from any structural or functional cardiac disorder that impairs the ability of the ventricle to fill or eject blood • CAD is the underlying cause of HF in two thirds of patients with LV systolic dysfunction • 2-Dimensional Echo is the single most useful diagnostic tool in the evaluation of patients with HF

  49. Systolic Dysfunction • Diastolic Dysfunction

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