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1. Chest Pain James Nixon, MD
Assistant Professor
Internal Medicine and Pediatrics
2. Case #1 A 65 year old female comes to the emergency room after awakening at 7:00 AM with Chest pain and SOB. Her husband is concerned that she might be having a heart attack.
3. What would be the differential for her chest pain?
6. Chest Pain Stable angina pectoris
11 percent of chest pain episodes
Unstable angina or myocardial infarction
1.5 percent of chest pain episodes
7. What are risk factors you would ask about for cardiac etiologies for chest pain? Smoking
Family history
Hyperlipidemia
Left ventricular hypertrophy
Hypertension
Cocaine
Age
Past History
8. What characteristics of the chest pain might make you more concerned for cardiac chest pain? Location
Associated Symptoms
Quality
Chronology
Onset Duration
Intensity
Exacerbating
Relieving
Situation
11. Any exam findings that might help distinguish cardiac from non cardiac chest pain? General Appearance
may suggest seriousness of symptoms.
Vital signs
marked difference in blood pressure between arms suggests aortic dissection
Palpate the chest wall
Hyperesthesia may be due to herpes zoster Complete cardiac examination
pericardial rub
signs of acute AI or AS
Ischemia may result in MI murmur, S4 or S3
Determine if breath sounds are symmetric and if wheezes, crackles or evidence of consolidation
12. Any tests that might help that you can do in the ER? EKG
ST elevation of > 1mm or new Q in 2 leads
Sens 45%
Above + ST depression or T-wave inversion
Sens 79%
False positive rate = 17%
13. Any tests that might help that you can do in the ER? Troponin, CK, myoglobin
CK-MB 88-90% sensitive at 4-6 hours
CK-MB 95-100% sensitive 8-12 hours after CP onset
2-3% of skeletal muscle is MB fraction
one study of 710 patients, an increase in CK-MB by > or =1.6 ng/mL at two hours compared to baseline for acute infarction
Sensitivity - 94%
Specificity - 92 %
Positive predictive value - 79 %
negative predictive value - 98 %
15. Any tests that might help that you can do in the ER? Chest X-Ray
18. Labs CK-MB = 15.1
Troponin T = 27
19. Case #2 A 57 year old male comes to Clinic complaining of substernal chest pain that comes on with exertion and goes away with rest.
20. What is his pre-test probability for having coronary artery disease?
22. What tests could help determine if this man truly does have coronary artery disease causing his symptoms?
23. Exercise Stress Test
28. Case #3 A 57 year old male comes in to the ER with sudden onset of “tearing chest pain” that radiates to his back.
What is your differential?
What exam findings might you look for?
What tests could you do and why?
What are the treatments for the most likely diagnoses?
29. What is your differential?
30. What exam findings might you look for? Acute MI
Hypotension in one extremity
Aortic murmur
Neurologic deficits, including paraplegia, stroke, or decreased consciousness
Syncope, tamponade, and sudden death due to rupture of the aorta into the pericardial space
Shock, hemothorax, and exsanguination
Acute lower extremity ischemia
31. 60 to 80 year-old men with a long history of systemic hypertension
Disorders of collagen (Marfan's syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome,syphilis)
Bicuspid aortic valve
Aortic coarctation
Trauma
32. 96 percent of acute aortic dissections can be identified based upon some combination of the following three clinical features
Immediate onset of aortic pain with a tearing and/or ripping character
Mediastinal and/or aortic widening on chest radiograph
Variation in pulse and/or blood pressure between the right and left arm
33. What tests could you do and why? CXR-sensitivity 63%
CT sensitivity 94%, specificity 87%
TEE
MRI sensitivity 98%, specificity 85%
Aortogram sensitivity 88%, specificity 94%
38. What are the treatments for the most likely diagnoses?
39. Case #4 A 72 year old obese diabetic male complains of 2-3 month history of progressive fatigue and more trouble with his breathing when he is doing housecleaning. He also is concerned because for the past two weeks he is waking up short of breath in the middle of the night.
What is your prioritized differential?
(What is most likely and what would concern you the most?)
What questions would help you refine your differential?
What would you look for on physical exam?
What test would you do to help refine your diagnosis?
40. What is your prioritized differential? (What is most likely and what would concern you the most?)
41. What questions would help you refine your differential?
42. What would you look for on physical exam? S3
Murmur
Elevated JVP
Tachycardia
Diaphoresis
Vasoconstriction
Crackles
Edema
Hepatomegaly
Heave
Lateral displacement apical impulse
43. What test would you do to help refine your diagnosis? CXR
EKG
Echocardiogram
46. Case #5 A 65 year old male with known coronary artery disease and long history of stable angina pectoris after walking 2 blocks presents complaining of chest pain occurring with simply walking across the room.
Does he still have stable angina pectoris?
What are potential causes for his worsening chest pain?
What would you do now?