1 / 52

CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES

CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES. Temple College ECA. Cardiovascular Disease. 63,400,000 Americans have one or more forms of heart or blood vessel disease 50% of all deaths are cardiovascular disease. Cardiovascular Disease.

zelia
Download Presentation

CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES Temple College ECA

  2. Cardiovascular Disease • 63,400,000 Americans have one or more forms of heart or blood vessel disease • 50% of all deaths are cardiovascular disease

  3. Cardiovascular Disease • Acute Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack) - leading cause of death in U.S. • 1.5 million Americans will have AMI’s this year • Of these .5 million will die! • 350,000 will die in first two hours!

  4. Cardiovascular Disease • Acute Coronary Syndromes • Acute Myocardial Infarction • Non ST Segment Elevation (NSTEMI) • ST Segment Elevation (STEMI) • Unstable Angina Pectoris • Stable Angina Pectoris

  5. Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors • Major Uncontrollable • Age • Sex • Race • Heredity

  6. Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors • Major Controllable • Smoking • High BP • High blood cholesterol • Diabetes

  7. Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors • Minor Controllable • Obesity • Lack of exercise • Stress • Personality

  8. Cardiovascular Disease Control of risk factors = decrease in Coronary Artery Disease and Acute Myocardial Infarction

  9. Coronary Artery Disease • Myocardium (heart muscle) requires continuous oxygen and nutrient supply • Myocardial blood supply passes through coronary arteries

  10. Coronary Artery Disease • Atherosclerosis • Narrowing of lumen • plaque formation - related to Risk Factors • results in decreased myocardial perfusion • Poor tissue perfusion causes: • tissue damage (ischemia) • tissue death (infarction)

  11. Atherosclerotic Plaque Formation

  12. Angina Pectoris“A choking in the chest” • Angere - to choke • Myocardial oxygen demand exceeds supply during periods of increased activity, exercise, or stressful event

  13. Angina Pectoris • During stress the myocardium demands more O2 • Coronary arteries would normally dilate to supply more blood and O2 • In Angina Pectoris, the coronary arteries are unable to dilate sufficiently to increase perfusion

  14. Classic Presentation • Chest Pain • SOB • Diaphoresis • N/V

  15. Not all patients read the textbook!

  16. Symptoms -Angina Pectoris • Pain • Substernal • Squeezing/Crushing/Heaviness • May radiate to arms, shoulders, jaw, upper back, upper abdomen back • May be associated with shortness of breath, nausea, sweating

  17. Symptoms -Angina Pectoris • Pain usually associated with 3E’s • Exercise • Eating • Emotion

  18. Symptoms -Angina Pectoris • Pain seldom lasts > 30 minutes • Pain relieved by • Rest • Nitroglycerin

  19. Symptoms -Angina Pectoris • Great anxiety/Fear • Fixation of the body • Pale, ashen, or livid face • Dyspnea (SOB) may be associated

  20. Symptoms -Angina Pectoris • Nausea • Diaphoresis • BP usually up during attack • Dysrhythmia may be present

  21. Angina Pectoris • Following an angina attack there is no residual damage to the myocardium

  22. Forms of Angina Pectoris • Stable Angina • Occurs with exercise • Predictable • Relieved by rest or Nitroglycerin

  23. Forms of Angina Pectoris • Unstable Angina • More frequent/severe • Can occur during rest • May indicate impending MI • Requires immediate treatment and transport to appropriate facility

  24. Acute Myocardial Infarction“Heart Attack” • Inadequate perfusion of myocardium • Death of myocardium • Infarct • Damage to myocardium • Ischemia

  25. Symptoms - AMI • Chest Pain - cardinal sign of myocardial infarction • Occurs in 85% of MI’s • Substernal • “Crushing,” “squeezing,” “tight,” “heavy”

  26. Symptoms - AMI • Chest Pain • May radiate to arms, shoulders, jaw, upper back, upper abdomen back • May vary in intensity • Unaffected by: • swallowing • coughing • deep breathing • movement

  27. Symptoms - AMI • Chest Pain • Unrelieved by rest/nitroglycerin • Pain lasts longer than angina pain (up to 12 hours) • “Silent’ MI • 15% of patients with MI, • particularly common in elderly and diabetics

  28. Symptoms - AMI • Shortness of breath • Weakness, dizziness, fainting • Nausea, vomiting • Pallor and diaphoresis (heavy sweating)

  29. Symptoms - AMI • Sense of impending doom • Denial • 50% of deaths occur in first two hours • Average patient waits 3 hours before seeking help

  30. Symptoms - AMI • Changes in pulse, BP, respiration are not diagnostic of AMI

  31. Acute Myocardial Infarction • Early recognition of MI is critical

  32. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • When in doubt, manage all chest pain as MI

  33. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • Begin management immediately if angina or MI are suspected. • Complete the history and physical exam as you treat.

  34. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • Position of Comfort • Patent Airway • High concentration O2 • non-rebreather mask 10-15 lpm

  35. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • Reassure the patient • Obtain a brief history and physical exam • Aspirin 325mg p.o.

  36. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • Nitroglycerin 0.4mg tablet sublingual • Patient should be sitting or lying down • Has Pt. Taken nitroglycerin in last 10 minutes? Is pain relieved? Headache? • Is BP > 100systolic? • q 5 minutes until pain relieved or three tablets administered

  37. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • If pain is unrelieved by rest, oxygen, nitroglycerin or if a change has occurred in pattern of angina, transport immediately • Transport in semi-sitting position if BP normal or elevated; flat if BP low

  38. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • Do not walk patient to the ambulance • Do not use lights/siren if patient is awake, alert, breathing without distress • Monitor vital signs every 5-10 minutes

  39. Management of Cardiac Chest Pain • Request early ALS back-up • Deaths in MI result from arrhythmia's • Arrhythmia's can be prevented with early drug therapy

  40. Hypertension • Condition • Chronic • Acute • Pathophysiology • Increased pressure to organs • Reduced blood flow • Increased Afterload

  41. Congestive Heart Failure • CHF = Inability of heart to pump blood out as fast as it enters. • Type • left-sided • right-sided • both.

  42. Causes of CHF • Coronary Artery Disease • Chronic hypertension (high blood pressure) • AMI • Valvular heart disease

  43. Congestive Heart Failure • Usually begins with left-sided failure. • Increased workload on left ventricle • Left ventricle fails • Blood “stacks up” in lungs • High pressure in capillary beds • Fluid forced out of capillaries into alveoli

  44. Congestive Heart Failure • Right-sided failure most commonly caused by Left-sided failure. Blood “backs up” into systemic circulation • Distended neck veins • Fluid in abdominal cavity • Pedal edema

  45. Symptoms of CHF • Weakness • Dyspnea • Dyspnea on exertion • Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea • Attacks of SOB that usually occur at night that awakens the patient

  46. Symptoms of CHF • Orthopnea • Difficulty breathing in any position other than standing or sitting • Abdominal discomfort • Jugular Vein Distention (JVD) • Pedal “Pitting” edema in lower extremities

  47. Symptoms of CHF • Tachycardia • Pulmonary Edema • Noisy, labored breathing • Coughing • Rales, wheezing • Pink, frothy sputum

  48. Heart Failure

  49. Management of CHF • Sit patient up, let feet dangle • Administer high concentration O2 • Assist ventilation as needed • Monitor vital signs q 5-10 minutes • Request early ALS back-up

  50. Pacemaker Failure • Position of comfort • Patent airway • High Concentration O2 • Assist ventilations as needed • ALS Intercept • CPR as needed • DO NOT worry about damage to pacemaker

More Related