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contenttextbook· 49 Acute Coronary Syndromes· item 50· p.379–396

334 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease Acute Coronary Syndromes Deborah B. Diercks Judd E. Hollander EPIDEMIOLOGY Ischemic heart disease is the leading cause of death among adults in the United States, with more than 400,000 people dying annually. Atherosclerotic disease of the epicardial coronary arteries—termed coronary artery disease—accounts for the vast majority of patients with ischemic heart disease. The predominant symptom of coronary artery disease is chest pain, and patient concern over potential acute heart disease contributes to the >8 million visits each year to U.S. EDs. In a typical adult ED population with acute chest pain, about 15% of patients will have an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). ACS encompasses unstable angina through acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Of patients with an ACS, approxi mately one third have an AMI, and the remainder have unstable angina. The three principal presentations of unstable angina are listed in Table 49-1. 1 These definitions assume that the anginal chest pain is due to ischemia, and this categorization does not apply to patients presenting to the ED with chest pain from other causes. During the initial ED assessment, it may not be possible to determine whether the patient has or will sustain permanent damage to the myocardium, has reversible ischemia (injury or unstable angina), or has a noncardiac cause of symptoms. The American College of Cardiology and American Heart Associa tion have a tool for estimating the short-term risk for death or AMI in patients with unstable angina (Table 49-2). ANATOMY The left coronary artery divides into the left circumflex and the left anterior descending branches (Figure 49-1). The left anterior descend ing branch courses down the anterior aspect of the heart providing the main blood supply to the anterior and septal regions of the heart. The circumflex branch supplies blood to some of the anterior wall and a large portion of the lateral wall of the heart. The right coronary artery supplies the right ventricle and provides some perfusion to the inferior aspect of the left ventricle through its continuation as the right posterior descending artery. The atrioventricular conduction system receives blood supply from the atrioventricular branch of the right coronary artery and the septal perforating branch of the left anterior descending coronary artery. Similarly, the right bundle branch and the posterior division of the left bundle branch each obtain blood flow from both the left anterior descending and right coronary arteries. The posteromedial papillary muscle receives blood supply from one coronary artery, usually the right coronary artery. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY Ischemia occurs when there is an imbalance between oxygen (O2) demand and O2 supply. O2 supply is influenced by the O2-carrying capacity of the CHAPTER TABLE 49-1 Three Principal Presentations of Unstable Angina Class Presentation Rest angina* Angina occurring at rest and that is prolonged, usually >20 min New-onset angina New-onset angina that markedly limits ordinary physical activity, such as walking 1–2 blocks or climbing 1 flight of stairs or performing lighter activity Increasing angina Previously diagnosed angina that has become distinctly more frequent, has a longer duration, or is lower in threshold, limiting ability to walk 1–2 blocks or climb 1 flight of stairs or perform lighter activity *Patients with non–ST-segment elevated myocardial infarction usually present with angina at rest.

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sing angina Previously diagnosed angina that has become distinctly more frequent, has a longer duration, or is lower in threshold, limiting ability to walk 1–2 blocks or climb 1 flight of stairs or perform lighter activity *Patients with non–ST-segment elevated myocardial infarction usually present with angina at rest. TABLE 49-2 Short-Term Risk of Death or Nonfatal Myocardial Infarction by Risk Stratification in Patients With Unstable Angina Feature High Likelihood (at least 1 of the following features must be present) Intermediate Likelihood (no high-risk feature, but must have 1 of the following) Low Likelihood (no high- or intermediate-risk feature, but may have any of the following) History Accelerating tempo of ischemic symptoms in preceding 48 h Prior myocardial infarction, peripheral or cerebrovascular disease, or coronary artery bypass grafting; prior aspirin use Character of the pain Prolonged, ongoing (>20 min) rest pain Prolonged (>20 min) rest angina, now resolved, with moderate or high likelihood of CAD Rest angina (>20 min) or relieved with rest or sublingual nitroglycerin Nocturnal angina New-onset or progressive angina in the past 2 wk without prolonged (>20 min) rest pain but with intermediate or high likelihood of CAD (Table 49-3) Increased angina frequency, severity, or duration Angina provoked at a lower threshold New-onset angina with onset 2 wk to 2 mo before presentation Clinical findings Pulmonary edema, most likely due to ischemia New or worsening mitral regurgitation murmur 3 or new/worsening rales Hypotension, bradycardia, tachycardia Age >75 y old Age >70 y old Chest discomfort reproduced by palpation ECG Angina at rest with transient ST-segment changes >0.5 mm Bundle branch block, new or presumed new Sustained ventricular tachycardia T-wave changes, pathologic Q waves, or resting ST depression <1 mm in multiple lead groups (anterior, inferior, lateral) Normal or unchanged ECG Cardiac markers Elevated cardiac troponins above threshold for myocardial infarction Slightly elevated cardiac troponins Normal Abbreviation: CAD = coronary artery disease. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 334 8/2/19 6:41 PM

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depression <1 mm in multiple lead groups (anterior, inferior, lateral) Normal or unchanged ECG Cardiac markers Elevated cardiac troponins above threshold for myocardial infarction Slightly elevated cardiac troponins Normal Abbreviation: CAD = coronary artery disease. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 334 8/2/19 6:41 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 335 Marginal branch Inferior vena cava Right coronary artery Right ventricle Right atrium Superior vena cava Aorta Pulmonary artery Left coronary artery Circumflex branch To left ventricle Anterior interventricular (anterior descending) artery Left ventricle Posterior interventricular artery FIGURE 49-1. Schematic diagram of the coronary arteries. TABLE 49-3 Likelihood That Signs and Symptoms Represent Acute Coronary Syndrome Secondary to Coronary Artery Disease Feature High Likelihood (any of the following) Intermediate Likelihood (absence of high-likelihood features and presence of any of the following) Low Likelihood (absence of high- or intermediate-likelihood features but may have the following) History Chest or left arm pain or discomfort as chief symptom reproducing prior documented angina Known history of coronary artery disease, including myocardial infarction Chest or left arm pain or discomfort as chief symptom Age >70 y old Male sex Diabetes mellitus Probable ischemic symptoms in absence of any of the intermediate-likelihood characteristics Recent cocaine use Examination Transient mitral regurgitation murmur, hypotension, diaphoresis, pulmonary edema, or rales Extracardiac vascular disease Chest discomfort reproduced by palpation ECG New, or presumably new, transient ST-segment deviation (≥1 mm) or T-wave inversion in multiple precordial leads Fixed Q waves ST depression 0.5–1.0 mm or T-wave inversion >1 mm T-wave flattening or inversion <1 mm in leads with dominant R waves Normal ECG Cardiac markers Elevated cardiac troponin I, troponin T, or MB fraction of creatine kinase Normal Normal Note: Estimation of the likelihood of significant coronary artery disease is a complex, multivariable problem that cannot be fully specified in a table such as this. Therefore, the table is meant to illustrate major relationships rather than offer rigid algorithms. blood and the coronary artery blood flow. The O2-carrying capacity of the blood is determined by the amount of hemoglobin present and O2 saturation. Coronary artery blood flow is determined by the duration of diastolic relaxation of the heart and peripheral vascular resistance. Humoral, neural, metabolic, and extravascular compressive forces and local autoregulation mechanisms determine the coronary vascular resistance. Exercise-induced myocardial ischemia and its sequelae usually occur as a result of fixed atherosclerotic lesions. ACS may be caused by secondary reduction in myocardial blood flow due to coronary arterial spasm, microvascular dysfunction, disruption or erosion of atherosclerotic plaques, and platelet aggregation or thrombus formation at the site of an atherosclerotic lesion. Secondary causes of myocardial ischemia are less common and prompted by factors extrinsic to the coronary arteries such as increased myocardial O 2 demand (i.e., fever, tachycardia, thyrotoxicosis), reduced blood flow (i.e., hypotension), or reduced O 2 delivery (i.e., anemia, hypoxemia). In the event of a secondary cause, global ischemia may occur widely or focally. Atherosclerotic plaque forms through repetitive injury to the vessel wall. Macrophages and smooth muscle cells are the main cellular ele ments in plaque development, whereas lipids are predominant in the extracellular milieu.

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a, hypoxemia). In the event of a secondary cause, global ischemia may occur widely or focally. Atherosclerotic plaque forms through repetitive injury to the vessel wall. Macrophages and smooth muscle cells are the main cellular ele ments in plaque development, whereas lipids are predominant in the extracellular milieu. Plaque fissuring and rupture are affected by features inherent to the plaque, such as its composition and shape; local factors, Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 335 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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a, hypoxemia). In the event of a secondary cause, global ischemia may occur widely or focally. Atherosclerotic plaque forms through repetitive injury to the vessel wall. Macrophages and smooth muscle cells are the main cellular ele ments in plaque development, whereas lipids are predominant in the extracellular milieu. Plaque fissuring and rupture are affected by features inherent to the plaque, such as its composition and shape; local factors, Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 335 8/2/19 6:42 PM 336 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease such as shear forces, coronary arterial tone, and coronary arterial perfusion pressure; and movements of the artery in response to myocardial contractions. When plaque rupture occurs, potent thrombogenic sub stances activate circulating platelets. The platelet response involves adhesion, activation, and aggregation. Platelet adhesion occurs through the weak platelet interactions with subendothelial adhesion molecules, such as collagen, fibronectin, and laminin, and the binding of the glycoprotein IIb receptor to the subendothelial form of von Willebrand factor. Adherent platelets are strongly thrombogenic. Lipid-laden macrophages in the plaque core and adventitia of the vessel wall release tissue factor, which stimulates the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin. Thrombin and the local shear forces are also potent platelet activators. Platelet secretion of adenosine diphosphate, thromboxane A 2, and serotonin trigger platelet activation. Activated platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptors become cross-linked by fibrinogen or von Willebrand factor in the final common pathway of platelet aggregation. The extent of O 2 deprivation and the clinical presentation of any coronary disease depends on the limitation of O 2 delivery imposed by any thrombus and the plaque. In stable angina, ischemia occurs only when activity induces O 2 demands beyond the supply restrictions imposed by a partially occluded coronary vessel. Ischemia occurs at a relatively fixed point and changes slowly over time. In this scenario, the atherosclerotic plaque has not ruptured, and there is little or no superimposed throm bus. In ACS, atherosclerotic plaque rupture and platelet-rich thrombus develop. Coronary blood flow is reduced suddenly, and myocardial ischemia occurs. The degree and duration of the O 2 supply–demand mismatch determine whether the patient develops reversible myocardial ischemia without necrosis (unstable angina) or acute myocardial isch emia with necrosis. More severe and prolonged obstruction increases the likelihood of infarction. AMI may inhibit myocardial contractility and impair both central and peripheral perfusion. When an area of the myocardium does not receive adequate O 2, the functional deterioration progresses; as the size of the infarcted myocardium increases, left ventricular pump function decreases. This creates increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and end-systolic volume. Cardiac output, stroke volume, and blood pressure may decrease. When left atrial and pulmonary capillary pres sures increase, heart failure or pulmonary edema may develop. Poor perfusion to the brain and kidneys can result in altered mental status and impaired renal function, respectively. CLINICAL FEATURES  HISTORY AND ASSOCIATED SYMPTOMS The main symptom of ischemic heart disease is chest discomfort or pain; the characterization of the severity, location, radiation, duration, and quality might be helpful. In addition, the presence of associated symp toms such as nausea, vomiting, diaphoresis, dyspnea, lightheadedness, syncope, and palpitations may help detect myocardial ischemia (see Tables 48-1 and 48-2 in Chapter 48, “Chest Pain”). Obtain information regarding the onset and duration of symptoms, activities that precipitate symptoms, and prior evaluations for similar symptoms to assess the possibility of acute myocardial ischemia.

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syncope, and palpitations may help detect myocardial ischemia (see Tables 48-1 and 48-2 in Chapter 48, “Chest Pain”). Obtain information regarding the onset and duration of symptoms, activities that precipitate symptoms, and prior evaluations for similar symptoms to assess the possibility of acute myocardial ischemia. Symptoms of acute myocardial ischemia may use descriptions other than pain, such as discomfort; look for descriptions of chest pressure, heaviness, tightness, fullness, or squeezing. Less commonly, patients describe their symptoms as knife-like, sharp, or stabbing. The classic pain or discomfort location is substernal or in the left chest, with radiation to the arm (either), neck, or jaw. Reproducible chest wall tenderness occurs in some patients. Exercise, stress, and a cold environment classically precipitate angina. Angina typically has a duration of symptoms of <10 minutes, occa sionally lasting up to 10 to 20 minutes, and usually improves within 2 to 5 minutes after rest or nitroglycerin. In contrast, acute myocardial ischemia is usually accompanied by more prolonged and severe chest discomfort, more prominent associated symptoms (e.g., nausea, dia phoresis, shortness of breath), and little response to initial sublingual nitroglycerin. Easy fatigability may be a prominent symptom of ACS, especially in women. Ask about the frequency of anginal episodes and any change in fre quency of episodes over the past few months. Determine if there is any increase in severity or duration of symptoms, or whether less effort is required to precipitate symptoms. Advanced age, female gender, and a history of diabetes mellitus are associated with less typical ACS presentations. Presentations with nonclassic features or silent myocardial ischemia are common; for example, as many as 37.5% of women and 27.4% of men present without chest pain. Up to 30% of patients with acute myocardial ischemia identified in large longitudinal studies do not seek medical care or recall any symptoms. The prognosis for patients with nonclassic symptoms (e.g., fatigue, weakness, not feeling well, vague discomfort) at the time of infarction is worse than that of patients with more classic symptoms. Women and the elderly are more likely to have presentations that differ from classic ones in the younger, male patients; across all age groups, those with unstable angina have nonclassic features nearly half the time. Even in patients <55 years old, women were more likely than men to present with associated symptoms such as epigastric pain, palpitations, and jaw pain. This is why the term atypical chest pain is misleading, because nonclassic presentations are common despite being often called atypical. Cardiac risk factors are poor predictors of risk for AMI or other ACSs.5 Traditional cardiac risk factors for coronary artery disease, such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, tobacco use, family history at an early age, and hypercholesterolemia, are not helpful to predict ACS in ED patients >40 years old. 5 The cardiac risk factors predict risk of coronary artery disease over time, not likelihood of presence at one moment.  PHYSICAL EXAMINATION Patients with ACS may appear well or may be uncomfortable, pale, cyanotic, or in respiratory distress. The pulse rate may be normal or fast, slow or irregular. Bradycardic rhythms are more common with inferior wall myocardial ischemia; in the setting of an acute anterior wall infarction, bradycardia or new heart block is a poor prognostic sign. Blood pressure can be normal, elevated (due to baseline hypertension, sympathetic stimulation, and anxiety), or decreased (due to pump failure or inadequate preload), although extremes of blood pressure are associated with a worse prognosis.

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ior wall infarction, bradycardia or new heart block is a poor prognostic sign. Blood pressure can be normal, elevated (due to baseline hypertension, sympathetic stimulation, and anxiety), or decreased (due to pump failure or inadequate preload), although extremes of blood pressure are associated with a worse prognosis. An S 3 is present in 15% to 20% of patients with AMI; if detected, an S3 may indicate a failing myocardium. The presence of a new systolic murmur is an ominous sign because it may signify papillary muscle dysfunction, a flail leaflet of the mitral valve with resultant mitral regurgitation, or a ventricular septal defect. The presence of rales, with or without an S 3 gallop, indicates left ventricular dysfunction and left-sided heart failure. Jugular venous dis tention, hepatojugular reflex, and peripheral edema suggest right-sided heart failure. DIAGNOSIS The diagnosis of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) depends on the ECG in the setting of symptoms suggestive of myocar dial infarction. The diagnosis of non–ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) depends on abnormal elevation of cardiac bio markers but may include ECG changes not meeting criteria for STEMI. The diagnosis of unstable angina is based on history (Table 49-1) because the ECG and cardiac injury biomarkers are nondiagnostic. Early risk assessment for the likelihood of myocardial infarction uses all of these data to aid decision making (Table 49-3). ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY The standard 12-lead ECG is the single best test—although it can be fallible—to identify patients with AMI upon ED presentation. 1 Obtain the initial 12-lead ECG and interpret the tracing quickly, ideally within 10 minutes of presentation in those patients with symptoms suggestive of myocardial ischemia. Prehospital ECGs reduce the time Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 336 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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llible—to identify patients with AMI upon ED presentation. 1 Obtain the initial 12-lead ECG and interpret the tracing quickly, ideally within 10 minutes of presentation in those patients with symptoms suggestive of myocardial ischemia. Prehospital ECGs reduce the time Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 336 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 337 TABLE 49-4 ECG ST-Segment–Based Criteria for Acute Myocardial Infarction Location ECG Findings Anteroseptal ST-segment elevations in V1, V2, and possibly V3 Anterior ST-segment elevations in V1, V2, V3, and V4 Anterolateral ST-segment elevations in V1–V 6, I, and aVL Lateral ST-segment elevations in I and aVL Inferior ST-segment elevations in II, III, and aVF Inferolateral ST-segment elevations in II, III, aVF, and V 5 and V6 True posterior* Initial R waves in V1 and V2 >0.04 s and R/S ratio ≥1; right-sided ECG shows 0.5-mm ST elevation in V 7–V 9 Right ventricular (RV) ST-segment elevations in II, III, and aVF and ST-segment depression in lateral leads; ST-segment elevation in RV leads V3R–V 6R *Posterior wall infarction does not produce Q-wave abnormalities in conventional leads and is diagnosed in the presence of tall R waves in V 1 and V2. TABLE 49-5 ECG Findings and Culprit Coronary Artery10-14 ECG Findings Culprit Artery Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%) Positive Predictive Value (%) Negative Predictive Value (%) ECG findings for inferior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction ST-segment elevation in lead III greater than in lead II plus ST-segment depression of >1 mV in lead I, lead aVL, or both Right coronary artery 90 71 94 70 In addition to the findings immediately above, ST-segment elevation on V 1, V4R, or both Proximal right coronary artery 79 100 100 88 Absence of the above findings plus ST-segment elevation in leads I, aVL, V 5, and V6 and ST-segment depression in leads V1, V2, and V3 Left circumflex coronary artery 83 96 91 93 ECG findings for anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction ST-segment elevation in leads V 1, V2, and V3 plus any of the features below:

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ce of the above findings plus ST-segment elevation in leads I, aVL, V 5, and V6 and ST-segment depression in leads V1, V2, and V3 Left circumflex coronary artery 83 96 91 93 ECG findings for anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction ST-segment elevation in leads V 1, V2, and V3 plus any of the features below: ST-segment elevation of >2.5 mm in lead V 1, or right bundle branch block with Q wave, or both Proximal left anterior descending coronary artery 12 100 100 61 ST-segment depression of >1 mm in leads II, III, and aVF Proximal left anterior descending coronary artery 34 98 93 68 ST-segment depression of ≤1 mm, or ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, and aVF Distal left anterior descending coronary artery 66 73 78 62 ECG findings for left coronary artery lesions * >0.5-mm elevation in aVR; possibly also ≥1-mm ST elevation in lead V1 Left coronary artery or severe multivessel disease Wellen’s sign: deeply inverted or deep biphasic T waves in V 1 and V2; T-wave findings may persist or be present even when patient is chest pain free Left anterior descending artery

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ST-segment elevation of >2.5 mm in lead V 1, or right bundle branch block with Q wave, or both Proximal left anterior descending coronary artery 12 100 100 61 ST-segment depression of >1 mm in leads II, III, and aVF Proximal left anterior descending coronary artery 34 98 93 68 ST-segment depression of ≤1 mm, or ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, and aVF Distal left anterior descending coronary artery 66 73 78 62 ECG findings for left coronary artery lesions * >0.5-mm elevation in aVR; possibly also ≥1-mm ST elevation in lead V1 Left coronary artery or severe multivessel disease Wellen’s sign: deeply inverted or deep biphasic T waves in V 1 and V2; T-wave findings may persist or be present even when patient is chest pain free Left anterior descending artery Note: 10 mm = 1 mV with standard ECG calibration. *Nabati M, Emadi M, Mollaalipour M, et al: ST segment elevation in lead aVR in the setting of acute coronary syndrome. Acta Cardiol 71: 47, 2016. [PMID: 26853253] from symptom onset to reperfusion therapy in STEMI patients. 6,7 (See Videos: ECG: Ischemia, ECG: MI Mimics, ECG: Myocardial Ischemia/ Infarction, ECG: Old MI; ECG: Posterior MI; ECG: ST Depression; ECG: STEMI; Right Ventricular MI.) ST-segment–based diagnostic ECG criteria for AMI are shown in Table 49-4. STEMI in the listed distributions suggests acute transmural injury. ST-segment depressions in these distributions suggest ischemia. Inferior wall AMIs should have a right-sided lead V 4 (V4R) obtained, because ST-segment elevation in V 4R is highly suggestive of right ven tricular infarction. For patients with a nondiagnostic tracing and persistent symptoms who have a high risk of ACS, repeat the ECG to detect developing changes. 1,6,8 Early studies of fibrinolytic therapy identified an increased risk of mortality in patients with new bundle branch block; this led to interpreting a new left bundle branch block as being a “STEMI equivalent. ” However, <10% of patients with new or possibly new left bundle branch block have AMI. Reciprocal ST-segment changes—those in leads away from or opposite the elevation area—are from subendocardial ischemia and denote a larger area of injury risk, an increased severity of underlying coronary artery disease, more severe pump failure, a higher likelihood of cardio vascular complications, and increased mortality. In general, the more elevated the ST segments and the more ST segments that are elevated, the more extensive is the injury. The ECG changes correlate often, but not always, with the infarctrelated vessel ( Table 49-5). A right sided ECG ( Figure 49-2A) and posterior ECG (Figure 49-2B) are sometimes needed to determine extent of infarction. Inferior wall AMIs can result from occlusion of the left circumflex artery or the right coronary artery. In the setting of an inferior wall AMI, ST-segment elevation in at least one lateral lead (V 5, V6, or aV L) with an isoelectric or elevated ST segment in lead I is strongly suggestive of a left circumflex lesion ( Figure 49-3). Elevation of avR > V 1 suggests left anterior descending artery occlusion ( Figure 49-4). The presence of ST-segment elevation in lead III greater than that in lead II predicts a right coronary artery occlusion (Figure 49-5). When accompanied by ST-segment elevation in V 1 or a V4R, it predicts a proximal right coronary artery lesion with accompanying right ventricular infarction (Figure 49-6), demonstrated by right-sided ECG leads. RV infarction associated with inferior infarction has higher morbidity than isolated inferior infarction. Reciprocal anterior ST-segment depres sions in V 1 through V 4 are equally prevalent in right coronary and left circumflex inferior wall AMIs. Figure 49-7 shows anterior myocardial infarction from distal left anterior descending artery occlusion, whereas Figure 49-8 shows anterior myocardial infarction from proximal left anterior descending artery occlusion. Posterior wall MI can be asso ciated with inferior or lateral MI, or can be isolated. As leads V 1-V3 indirectly reflect the posterior wall, a posterior wall MI can be identified with posterior lead placement (Figures 49-2B and 49-9). Figure 49-9 shows posterior wall myocardial infarction.

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descending artery occlusion. Posterior wall MI can be asso ciated with inferior or lateral MI, or can be isolated. As leads V 1-V3 indirectly reflect the posterior wall, a posterior wall MI can be identified with posterior lead placement (Figures 49-2B and 49-9). Figure 49-9 shows posterior wall myocardial infarction. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 337 8/2/19 6:42 PM 338 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease V2R V3R V4RV5R V6R V1R V1 V2 V5V4 V3 V6 V9 V8 V7 FIGURE 49-2. A. Right-sided lead placement. B. Posterior lead placement. Leads V4 to V6 are removed from the anterior chest wall and replaced as V7 to V9 on the back. Lead V9 is placed paraspinal. FIGURE 49-3. ECG showing inferior-lateral myocardial infarction from left circumflex coronary artery occlusion. ECG from a 42-year-old man presenting with chest pain. ECG shows ST-segment elevation in limb leads II, III (inferior), and aVF, as well as lead V 6 (lateral). ST-segment depression is evident in leads V 1, V2, and V 3, reflecting reciprocal changes in the anterior leads. The patient was found to have 100% occlusion of the left circumflex coronary artery at cardiac catheterization. [Used with permission of David M. Cline, MD, Wake Forest University.] III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 V5 ECGs are frequently misinterpreted. 15 False-positive interpretations of the ECG, indicating STEMI when no injury exists, occur between 11% and 14% of the time. 14 Balancing this is the observation that even patients with normal or nonspecific ECGs have a 1% to 5% incidence of AMI and a 4% to 23% incidence of unstable angina . Patients with nondiagnostic ECGs or evidence of ischemia that is age indeterminate have a 4% to 7% incidence of AMI and a 21% to 48% incidence of unstable angina. Demonstration of new ischemia in ECG increases the risk of AMI from 25% to 73% and the unstable angina risk from 14% to 43%. Thus, the standard 12-lead ECG is useful for cardiovascular risk stratification of patients with ACS. Guidelinerecommended additions to the standard 12-lead ECG are the use of right-sided precordial leads such as V 4R in the setting of acute inferior myocardial infarction to detect right ventricular involvement and V 7 to V9 in patients with suspected posterior myocardial infarction from a circumflex lesion. 1,6,16 Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 338 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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2-lead ECG are the use of right-sided precordial leads such as V 4R in the setting of acute inferior myocardial infarction to detect right ventricular involvement and V 7 to V9 in patients with suspected posterior myocardial infarction from a circumflex lesion. 1,6,16 Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 338 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 339 FIGURE 49-5. ECG showing inferior myocardial infarction from right coronary artery occlusion. ECG from an 80-year-old man presenting with acute chest pain. The ECG shows STsegment elevation in lead III greater than in lead II plus ST-segment depression of >1 mm in lead I and lead aVL. The patient was found to have 100% occlusion of the right coronary artery at cardiac catheterization. [Used with permission of David M. Cline, MD, Wake Forest University.] III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 V5 FIGURE 49-4. ST-segment elevation in lead aVR. First ED ECG taken in a patient with acute chest pain. Note elevation in aVR greater than that of V 1, suggesting left anterior descending artery occlusion. Initial troponin was normal; second troponin was abnormal. Emergency cardiac catheterization demonstrated 90% occlusion of left main coronary artery. [ECG used with permission of Department of Emergency Medicine, University of North Carolina Hospitals.] III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 V5 There are several clinical conditions in which ECG interpretation is difficult (Table 49-6). In the setting of paced rhythms or left bundle branch block, acute myocardial ischemia can be identified (Figure 49-10) with select findings. In those with a preexisting left bundle branch block, the following patterns are indicative of AMI: (1) ST-segment elevation of 1 mm or greater and concordant (in the same direction as the main deflection) with the QRS complex (odds ratio, 25.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 11.6% to 54.7%) seen in Figure 49-10C; (2) ST-segment depression of 1 mm or more in leads V 1, V2, or V3 (odds ratio, 6.0; 95% CI, 1.9% to 19.3%) seen in Figure 49-10D; and (3) ST-segment elevation of 5 mm or greater and discordant (in the opposite direction) with the QRS complex (odds ratio, 4.3; 95% CI, 1.8% to 10.6%) seen in Figure 49-10E. Right ventricular pacing, the common pacemaker lead location, causes secondary repolarization changes of opposing polarity to that of the predominant QRS complex. Most leads have predominant negative QRS complexes followed by ST-segment elevation and positive T waves. ST-segment elevation of at least 5 mm is most indicative of AMI in leads with predominantly negative QRS complexes. 17 Any ST-segment elevation concordant to the QRS complex in a predominantly positive QRS complex is highly specific for AMI. The QRS complex is predominantly negative in leads V 1 to V 3 with right ventricular pacing. ST-segment depression in these leads has 80% specificity for AMI. 17 Wellens’ sign or syndrome describes a pattern of abnormal T waves in the precordial leads V 2 and V 3 associated with critical stenosis of Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 339 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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negative in leads V 1 to V 3 with right ventricular pacing. ST-segment depression in these leads has 80% specificity for AMI. 17 Wellens’ sign or syndrome describes a pattern of abnormal T waves in the precordial leads V 2 and V 3 associated with critical stenosis of Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 339 8/2/19 6:42 PM 340 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 V5 FIGURE 49-7. ECG showing anterior myocardial infarction from distal left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion. ECG from a 52-year-old man presenting with chest pain. ECG shows ST-segment elevation in V1, V2, and V3, with the absence of ST-segment depression in leads II, III, and aVF. The patient was found to have 100% occlusion of the distal left anterior descending coronary artery at cardiac catheterization. [Used with permission of David M. Cline, MD, Wake Forest University.] III aVF aVL aVR V3 V3 V2 V1 V5 V4 III aVF aVL aVR V3R V6R V2R V1R V5R V4R III aVF aVL aVR V3 V3 V2 V1 V5 V4 III aVF aVL aVR V3RV 6R V2R V1R V5R V4R FIGURE 49-6. Right ventricular infarction. A. ECG showing inferior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and ST-segment elevation in lead V 1 suggestive of right ventricular infarction. B. Same patient with placement of right ventricular leads, see Fig. 49-2A, showing ST-segment elevation in V 3R, V4R, V5R, and V 6R compatible with right ventricular infarction. [Used with permission of J. Stephan Stapczynski, Maricopa Medical Center.] the left anterior descending artery 18 ( Figure 49-11 and Table 49-7). Approximately 75% of patients with this finding have deeply inverted T waves, and about a quarter of patients will display a variant pattern of biphasic T waves in the same leads. 19,20 T-wave abnormalities are often also seen in leads V1 and V4 or occasionally in leads V5 and V6. The abnormal T waves of Wellens’ syndrome are usually visible when the patient is pain free and may normalize when pain recurs; repeating the ECG when pain resolves or recurs can aid in detection of these dynamic changes. 20 Up to Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 340 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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4 or occasionally in leads V5 and V6. The abnormal T waves of Wellens’ syndrome are usually visible when the patient is pain free and may normalize when pain recurs; repeating the ECG when pain resolves or recurs can aid in detection of these dynamic changes. 20 Up to Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 340 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 341 III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 V5 FIGURE 49-8. ECG showing anterior myocardial infarction from proximal left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion. ECG from a 65-year-old man presenting with chest pain. ECG shows ST-segment elevation in V 1, V2, and V 3, and >1 mm of ST-segment depression in leads II, III, and aVF. The patient was found to have 100% occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery at cardiac catheterization. [Used with permission of David M. Cline, MD, Wake Forest University.] FIGURE 49-9. A. ECG with acute inferior wall myocardial infarction (MI) but ST-segment depression in V 1 and V2 suggesting accompanying posterior wall MI. B. Posterior lead placement with ST-segment elevation in V8 and V9 confirming posterior wall MI. aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V9 V8 V4 Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 341 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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ocardial infarction (MI) but ST-segment depression in V 1 and V2 suggesting accompanying posterior wall MI. B. Posterior lead placement with ST-segment elevation in V8 and V9 confirming posterior wall MI. aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V6 V5 V4 III aVF aVL aVR V3 V2 V1 V9 V8 V4 Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 341 8/2/19 6:42 PM 342 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease AB CD E FIGURE 49-10. Discordant and concordant ST elevation and depression in the setting of left bundle branch block. ST-segment abnormalities in left bundle branch block. A. Discordant ST-segment depression (“normal”). B. Discordant ST-segment elevation (“normal”). C. Concordant ST-segment elevation (strongly suggestive of acute myocardial infarction [AMI]). D. Concordant ST-segment depression (suggestive of AMI). E. Excessive (>5 mm) discordant ST-segment elevation (weakly suggestive of AMI). [Used with permission of William Brady, MD, University of Virginia.] TABLE 49-6 Conditions in Which ECG Interpretation Can Be Difficult •  May  have ST-segment elevation in the absence of acute myocardial infarction •  Early  repolarization •  Left  ventricular hypertrophy •  Pericarditis •  Myocarditis •  Left  ventricular aneurysm •  Hypertrophic  cardiomyopathy •  Hypothermia •  Ventricular  paced rhythms •  Left  bundle branch block •  Takotsubo  cardiomyopathy •  May  have ST-segment depressions in the absence of ischemia •  Hypokalemia •  Digoxin  effect •  Cor  pulmonale and right heart strain •  Early  repolarization •  May  have T-wave inversions in the absence of ischemia •  Persistent  juvenile pattern •  Stokes-Adams  syncope or seizures •  Posttachycardia  T-wave inversion •  Postpacemaker  T-wave inversion •  Intracranial  pathology (CNS hemorrhage) •  Mitral  valve prolapse •  Primary  or secondary myocardial diseases •  Pulmonary  embolism or cor pulmonale from other causes •  Spontaneous  pneumothorax •  Myocardial  contusion •  Right  bundle branch block T waves, de Winter ST-T–wave complex (upsloping of ST segment with overall ST depression), and posterior STEMI patterns should receive early attempts at reperfusion. (See Video: Wellens’ Sign.) SERUM MARKERS OF MYOCARDIAL INJURY Patients with diagnostic ST-segment elevation on their initial ECG do not require serum marker measurement to make treatment and disposition decisions. Conversely, serum markers are useful in patients with nondiagnostic ECGs for diagnosis of NSTEMI and risk stratification of patients with STEMI, NSTEMI, and unstable angina. Even low-level cardiac marker elevations are independent risk factors for acute (<30 days) cardiac complications and short-term (<1 year) prognosis in unstable angina. 22 Low-level elevations in either troponin correlate with risk for cardiovascular complications in unstable angina, coronary artery disease, and renal failure. 22 Troponin is sensitive and specific for cardiac myocardial necrosis, but there are many causes of myocardial necrosis unrelated to ACS (see Table 48-5). New high-sensitivity cardiac troponins have improved ability to detect ischemia. The high-sensitivity troponins identify 90% to 100% of patients with AMI at the time of arrival using the lowest cut point, albeit with limited specificity (between 34% and 80% depending on the cutoff used). 23-25 Troponin values above the 99th percentile reflect myocardial injury, but not all myocardial injury is acute. Delta or changing values FIGURE 49-11. Wellens’ sign with ECG showing deep symmetric T-wave inversions in leads V2 to V5. [Reproduced with permission from Lefebvre C, O’Neill J, Cline D (eds): Atlas of Cardiovascular Emergencies. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Education, Inc. © 2015. Fig 2.32.] III IIII III IaVF IaVL IaVR IV3 IV2 IV1 IV6 IV5 IV4 15% of patients presenting with unstable angina will display the Wellens’ sign.

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in leads V2 to V5. [Reproduced with permission from Lefebvre C, O’Neill J, Cline D (eds): Atlas of Cardiovascular Emergencies. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Education, Inc. © 2015. Fig 2.32.] III IIII III IaVF IaVL IaVR IV3 IV2 IV1 IV6 IV5 IV4 15% of patients presenting with unstable angina will display the Wellens’ sign. 18,21 Because of the high incidence of critical coronary stenosis and the potential for acute infarction, patients with Wellens’ syndrome should receive early interventional management. Similarly, those with hyperacute Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 342 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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in leads V2 to V5. [Reproduced with permission from Lefebvre C, O’Neill J, Cline D (eds): Atlas of Cardiovascular Emergencies. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Education, Inc. © 2015. Fig 2.32.] III IIII III IaVF IaVL IaVR IV3 IV2 IV1 IV6 IV5 IV4 15% of patients presenting with unstable angina will display the Wellens’ sign. 18,21 Because of the high incidence of critical coronary stenosis and the potential for acute infarction, patients with Wellens’ syndrome should receive early interventional management. Similarly, those with hyperacute Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 342 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 343 over a 1- to 3-hour period can help distinguish acute from chronic injury, although it is important to realize that not all acute myocardial injury is due to AMI. Authors of large observational studies suggest that a single undetectable high-sensitivity troponin plus no ECG evidence of ischemia identifies patients at a very low risk for ACS. Despite the new sensitive assays, guidelines1,6,7 and experts27 recommend serial troponin testing to identify acute disease. A serial high-sensitivity troponin interval as short as 2 hours coupled with a low Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction risk score (<2) virtually excludes AMI. 28 The European Society of Cardiology recommends a 3-hour serial interval when highsensitivity troponins are used or a 0 hour and 1 hour blood draw when a rapid algorithm exists that incorporates a delta change. 29,30 Elevated levels of the cardiac troponins in patients with NSTEMI increase the short-term risk of death by 3.1-fold (1.6% vs. 5.2%). 23 Although patients with elevated troponins in the absence of ACS may be “false positive” for AMI, elevated troponin of any amount is associated with a high frequency of worse outcomes. Taken together, the data strongly support the claim that any measurable elevated troponin is always worse than no elevated troponin and that more troponin elevation is always worse than less troponin elevation with respect to prognosis. 26,31,32 B-type natriuretic peptide, an established marker for patients with heart failure, is often elevated in patients with ACS; if elevated, ACS patients are at higher risk for adverse cardiovascular events, heart failure, or death. 6 When used in conjunction with other markers, the addition of B-type natriuretic peptide increases sensitivity at the cost of decreased specificity, with only a slight increase in overall diagnostic accuracy. For this reason, B-type natriuretic peptide is not routinely measured in those with suspected ACS. GENERAL TREATMENT The treatment of ACS is based on duration and persistence of symp toms, cardiac history, and findings on physical examination and the initial ECG (Figure 49-12). Establish IV access, give aspirin if not already given by EMS, and, as long as there are no contraindications, provide ECG monitoring. Many recommend supplemental O 7; however, there is little evidence for benefit in patients without hypoxemia, and small studies have shown a negative effect with high-flow O 2.33 The key treatment strategies aim to achieve immediate reperfusion and limit infarct size (Table 49-8 and Table 49-9). STEMI TREATMENT Patients with persistent symptoms and STEMI should receive mechanical or pharmacologic reperfusion attempts . Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with or without stent placement is the dominant current approach to mechanical reperfusion. 6 Pharmacologic reperfusion is accomplished with fibrinolytic therapy, which is improved with adjuvant antiplatelet and antithrombin therapy. American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology guide lines target a treatment goal of ≤90 minutes for a patient who arrives at a hospital with PCI capability or of ≤120 minutes for patients arriving at a hospital without PCI capability to account for transfer time. 6,7 Fibrinolysis should be given within 30 minutes of ED arrival if PCI cannot be accomplished within these time frames.

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a treatment goal of ≤90 minutes for a patient who arrives at a hospital with PCI capability or of ≤120 minutes for patients arriving at a hospital without PCI capability to account for transfer time. 6,7 Fibrinolysis should be given within 30 minutes of ED arrival if PCI cannot be accomplished within these time frames. 7 The concept of “first medical contact to device/balloon time” replaces the “door to needle” or “door to balloon” time. 7 Each health system and institution treating ACS patients should develop protocols to drive optimal methods of reperfusion, determining which strategy it will use depending on its capabilities. Most STEMI patients receive antiplatelet agents, antithrombins, and nitrates in the ED. Treat patients with unstable angina or NSTEMI with antiplatelet agents, antithrombins, and nitrates. 1 Those with unstable angina or NSTEMI refractory to these therapies or those scheduled to undergo PCI also may benefit from the use of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonists (Table 49-8 and Table 49-9). TABLE 49-7 General Criteria for Wellens’ Syndrome •  History  of episodic chest pain consistent with unstable angina •  During  pain, the ECG may not display abnormal T waves •   When pain free, abnormal T waves seen, most prominent in leads V2 and V3, often in leads V1 and V4, and occasionally in leads V5 and V6 •  Deep  symmetric T-wave inversion seen in about 75% of Wellens’ syndrome patients •  Biphasic  T waves seen in about 25% of Wellens’ syndrome patients •  No  pathologic Q waves or loss of R waves •  Normal  or minimally elevated ST segments •  Normal  or minimally elevated cardiac biomarkers History, Physical Examination, ECG ST-segment elevation AMI Nondiagnostic or ischemic ECG (without ST elevation) Aspirin Clopidogrel or ticagrelor* Nitroglycerin β-Blockers Antithrombin† Aspirin Clopidogrel or ticagrelor* Nitroglycerin β-Blockers‡ Antithrombin† Emergent PCI Consider glycoprotein IIB/IIIa inhibitors with PCI Fibrinolytic therapy Early Intervention Consider glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors or bivalirudin with PCI Medical Management Consider glycoprotein IIB/IIIa inhibitors or bivalirudin for high-risk patients FIGURE 49-12. Treatment considerations for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients. *Prasugrel should be considered at the time of PCI in patients who have not yet received either clopidogrel or ticagrelor. †Enoxaparin, unfractionated heparin, or fondaparinux. Note: See text for discussion of individual treatment options, indications, and contraindications. ‡Risk factors for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects: (1) signs of heart failure; (2) evidence of a low cardiac output state; (3) increased risk for cardiogenic shock (cumulatively: age >70 years old, systolic blood pressure <120 mm Hg, sinus tachycardia >110 beats/min or bradycardia <60 beats/min, and longer duration of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction symptoms before diagnosis and treatment); or (4) standard relative contraindications to β-blockade (PR interval >0.24 seconds, second- or third-degree heart block, active asthma, or reactive airway disease). AMI = acute myocardial infarction; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 343 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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diagnosis and treatment); or (4) standard relative contraindications to β-blockade (PR interval >0.24 seconds, second- or third-degree heart block, active asthma, or reactive airway disease). AMI = acute myocardial infarction; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 343 8/2/19 6:42 PM 344 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease TABLE 49-8 Drugs Used in the Emergency Treatment of STEMI Antiplatelet Agents Aspirin 162–325 milligrams Clopidogrel Loading dose of 600 milligrams PO followed by 75 mg PO daily. No loading dose is administered in patients >75 y old receiving fibrinolytics Prasugrel Loading dose of 60 milligrams promptly and no more than 1 h after PCI once coronary anatomy is defined and a decision is made to proceed with PCI Ticagrelor Loading dose is 180 milligrams PO followed by 90 milligrams twice a day Antithrombins Unfractionated heparin Bolus of 60 units/kg (maximum, 4000 units) followed by infusion of 12 units/kg/h (maximum, 1000 units/h) titrated to a partial thromboplastin time 1.5–2.5 × control Enoxaparin 30 milligrams IV bolus followed by 1 milligram/kg SC every 12 h Fondaparinux 2.5 milligrams SC * Fibrinolytic Agents Streptokinase 1.5 million units over 60 min Anistreplase 30 units IV over 2–5 min Alteplase Body weight >67 kg: 15 milligrams initial IV bolus; 50 milligrams infused over next 30 min; 35 milligrams infused over next 60 min Body weight <67 kg: 15 milligrams initial IV bolus; 0.75 milligram/kg infused over next 30 min; 0.5 milligram/kg infused over next 60 min Reteplase 10 units IV over 2 min followed by 10 units IV bolus 30 min later Tenecteplase Weight Dose (total dose not to exceed 50 milligrams) <60 kg 30 milligrams ≥60 but <70 kg 35 milligrams ≥70 but <80 kg 40 milligrams ≥80 but <90 kg 45 milligrams ≥90 kg 50 milligrams Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa Inhibitors† Abciximab 0.25 milligram/kg bolus followed by infusion of 0.125 microgram/kg/min (maximum, 10 micrograms/min) for 12–24 h Eptifibatide 180 micrograms/kg bolus followed by infusion of 2.0 micrograms/kg/min for 72–96 h Tirofiban 0.4 microgram/kg/min for 30 min followed by infusion of 0.1 microgram/kg/min for 48–96 h Other Anti-Ischemic Therapies Nitroglycerin Sublingual: 0.4 milligram every 5 min × 3 PRN pain IV: Start at 10 micrograms/min, titrate to 10% reduction in MAP if normotensive, 30% reduction in MAP if hypertensive Morphine 2–5 milligrams IV every 5–15 min PRN pain Metoprolol 50 milligrams PO every 12 h on first day, unless significant hypertension, may consider 5 milligrams IV over 2 min every 5 min up to 15 milligrams; withhold β-blockers initially if the patient is at risk for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects ‡ Atenolol 25–50 milligrams PO, unless significant hypertension, may consider 5 milligrams IV over 5 min, repeat once 10 min later; withhold β-blockers initially if the patient is at risk for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects ‡ Abbreviations: MAP = mean arterial pressure; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention; PRN = as needed; STEMI = ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. *Fondaparinux should not be used as monotherapy for PCI; if used, addition of unfractionated heparin or bivalirudin is recommended before PCI. †American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association 2009 focused update for STEMI patients recommended glycoprotein IIB/IIa inhibitors be given at the time of PCI; benefit prior to arrival in the cardiac catheterization laboratory is uncertain.

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of unfractionated heparin or bivalirudin is recommended before PCI. †American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association 2009 focused update for STEMI patients recommended glycoprotein IIB/IIa inhibitors be given at the time of PCI; benefit prior to arrival in the cardiac catheterization laboratory is uncertain. ‡Risk factors for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects: (1) signs of heart failure; (2) evidence of a low cardiac output state; (3) increased risk for cardiogenic shock (cumulatively: age >70 y old, systolic blood pressure <120 mm Hg, sinus tachycardia >110 beats/min or bradycardia <60 beats/min, and longer duration of STEMI symptoms before diagnosis and treatment); or (4) standard relative contraindications to β-blockade (PR interval >0.24 s, second- or third-degree heart block, active asthma, or reactive airway disease). NSTEMI TREATMENT For patients with NSTEMI (which by definition requires the time for biomarkers to become elevated and the clinical laboratory to perform the measurement), an invasive approach within 24 to 48 hours using PCI reduces the composite of death, myocardial infarction, or recurrent ACS by 19% in women and 27% in men. 34 Therefore, the early invasive approach deployed in STEMI is recommended in NSTEMI patients only with refractory angina or hemodynamic or electrical instability or in patients at increased risk for clinical events. Based on the results of trials and a meta-analysis, 35,36 the American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology guidelines for the management of unstable angina/NSTEMI patients recommend early (within 24 hours) invasive therapy in patients with signs and symptoms such as recurrent angina/ischemia with or without symptoms of congestive heart failure, elevated cardiac troponins, new or presumably new ST-segment depression, high-risk findings on noninvasive stress testing, depressed left ventricular function, hemodynamic instability, sustained ventricular tachycardia, PCIs within the previous 6 months, or prior coronary artery bypass grafting. 1 More aggressive and earlier PCI in these patients has not proven beneficial compared to the within 48 hours approach. 37,38 If patients with unstable angina/NSTEMI are hemodynamically unstable, guidelines recommend invasive strategy within 2 hours. PERCUTANEOUS CORONARY INTERVENTION The American College of Cardiology, the American Heart Associa tion, and the European Society of Cardiology recommend PCI as the preferred method of reperfusion therapy if the first medical contact to first balloon inflation time is <90 to 120 minutes. 6,7,39 In the early presenting cohort (within 3 hours of symptom onset), the decision to use primary PCI rather than fibrinolysis is based on institutional Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 344 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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ethod of reperfusion therapy if the first medical contact to first balloon inflation time is <90 to 120 minutes. 6,7,39 In the early presenting cohort (within 3 hours of symptom onset), the decision to use primary PCI rather than fibrinolysis is based on institutional Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 344 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 345 TABLE 49-9 Drugs Used in the Emergency Treatment of Unstable Angina or NSTEMI Antiplatelet Agents Aspirin 162–325 milligrams Clopidogrel Loading dose of 300–600 milligrams PO followed by 75 milligrams/d Prasugrel Loading dose of 60 milligrams promptly and no more than 1 h after PCI once coronary anatomy is defined and a decision is made to proceed with PCI Ticagrelor Loading dose of 180 milligrams PO followed by 90 milligrams twice a day Antithrombins Heparin Bolus of 60 units/kg (maximum, 4000 units) followed by infusion of 12 units/kg/h (maximum, 1000 units/h) titrated to a partial thromboplastin time 1.5–2.5 × control Enoxaparin 1 milligram/kg SC every 12 h Fondaparinux 2.5 milligrams SC Direct Thrombin Inhibitor Bivalirudin 0.75 milligram/kg IV bolus followed by 1.75 milligrams/kg/h infusion for duration of procedure Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa Inhibitors Eptifibatide 180 micrograms/kg bolus followed by infusion of 2.0 micrograms/kg/min for 72–96 h Tirofiban 0.4 microgram/kg/min for 30 min followed by infusion of 0.1 microgram/kg/min for 48–96 h Other Anti-Ischemic Therapies Nitroglycerin Sublingual: 0.4 milligram every 5 min × 3 PRN pain IV: Start at 10 micrograms/min, titrate to 10% reduction in MAP if normotensive, 30% reduction in MAP if hypertensive Metoprolol 50 milligrams PO every 12 h first day; unless significant hypertension, may consider 5 milligrams IV over 2 min every 5 min up to 15 milligrams; withhold β-blockers initially if the patient is at risk for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects * Atenolol 25–50 milligrams PO; unless significant hypertension, may consider 5 milligrams IV over 5 min, repeat once 10 min later; withhold β-blockers initially if the patient is at risk for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects * Abbreviations: MAP = mean arterial pressure; NSTEMI = non–ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction; PRN = as needed. *Risk factors for cardiogenic shock/adverse effects: (1) signs of heart failure; (2) evidence of a low cardiac output state; (3) increased risk for cardiogenic shock (cumulatively: age >70 y old, systolic blood pressure <120 mm Hg, sinus tachycardia >110 beats/min or bradycardia <60 beats/min, and longer duration of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction symptoms before diagnosis and treatment); or (4) standard rela tive contraindications to β-blockade (PR interval >0.24 s, second- or third-degree heart block, active asthma, or reactive airway disease). expertise, availability of the cardiac catheterization team, and the indi vidual patient’s risk of complications from fibrinolysis. Coronary angioplasty with or without stent placement is the most common PCI; alternatives include atherectomy and laser angioplasty. Balloon angioplasty increases the size of the arterial lumen through endothelial denudation; cracking, splitting, and disruption of athero sclerotic plaque; dehiscence of intima and plaque from underlying media; and stretching or tearing of underlying media and adventitia. With successful dilatation, small amounts of arterial wall dissection and aneurysmal expansion may be seen. The greater the increase in luminal size, the lower is the risk of restenosis. However, more aggressive balloon inflation can augment dissection, platelet deposition, thrombus forma tion, and plaque hemorrhage. Alternative PCI procedures attempt to limit complications. Direc tional and rotational coronary atherectomy extracts atherosclerotic tissue from the coronary artery.

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he risk of restenosis. However, more aggressive balloon inflation can augment dissection, platelet deposition, thrombus forma tion, and plaque hemorrhage. Alternative PCI procedures attempt to limit complications. Direc tional and rotational coronary atherectomy extracts atherosclerotic tissue from the coronary artery. Excimer laser atherectomy vaporizes atheromatous tissue. It results in larger luminal diameters but has not reduced rates of restenosis or other complications associated with per cutaneous angioplasty procedures. Coronary stents are fenestrated stainless steel tubes that are expanded by a balloon to provide scaffolding within the coronary arteries. Adding antiplatelet therapy (in particular, thienopyridines and glycoprotein IIb/ IIIa inhibitors) results in lower adverse events at 6 months. Drug-eluting stents are associated with decreased early (within months) vessel closure but a higher delayed closure, particularly once antiplatelet agents (clopidogrel) are stopped. In centers with expertise in direct angioplasty, primary PCI reduces the cardiovascular complication rate in patients with AMI compared to fibrinolysis. 6,40,41 The longer the duration of symptoms, the greater is the benefit to primary PCI over fibrinolysis. PCI is more effective in establishing flow and reducing reocclusion in the infarct-related artery than fibrinolytic therapy and is associated with a decreased incidence of short- and long-term death, nonfatal reinfarction, and intracranial hemorrhage compared with fibrinolytic therapy. Registry data show that the targeted reperfusion time goal is met less than half the time. 39 Strategies42,43 to optimize door to balloon time include EMS direct or emergency physician activation of the catheterization laboratory without cardiologist consultation by a one-call system (similar to trauma activations); having a trained catheterization team ready in 20 minutes; a feedback loop providing the EMS provider and emergency physician with data on the individual case; quality assurance processes in place to measure and report back times; and continually enhancing the team-based approach. FIBRINOLYTICS Fibrinolytic agents (tissue plasminogen activator, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator, tenecteplase, streptokinase, and anistreplase) act on the acute thrombosis directly or indirectly as plasminogen activators. Plasminogen, an inactive proteolytic enzyme, binds directly to fibrin during thrombus formation to form a plasminogen–fibrin complex. This plasminogen–fibrin complex incorporated into the clot is more susceptible than circulating plasma plasminogen to activation (thus, the concept that fibrinolytic agents are to a varying degree “clot specific, ” promoting fibrin proteolysis). Fibrinolytic therapy improves left ventricular function and shortterm and long-term mortality. A meta-analysis found that the net benefit of fibrinolytic treatment in the first 3 hours was >30 lives saved per 1000 patients. 44 The loss of benefit per hour delay in fibrinolytic administration was 1.6 lives per 1000 patients per hour. Fibrinolytic therapy is indicated for patients with STEMI (as a reperfusion option) if time to treatment is <6 to 12 hours from symptom onset and the ECG has at least 1 mm of ST-segment elevation in two or more contiguous leads. 6,7 Therapy is more beneficial if given early and for larger infarctions and anterior infarctions than for smaller or inferior infarctions. In the elderly, the overall risk of mortality from AMI is high. The proportionate reduction in mortality rate appears to be Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 345 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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ads. 6,7 Therapy is more beneficial if given early and for larger infarctions and anterior infarctions than for smaller or inferior infarctions. In the elderly, the overall risk of mortality from AMI is high. The proportionate reduction in mortality rate appears to be Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 345 8/2/19 6:42 PM 346 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease less in patients >75 years old, but the absolute number of patients who may be saved is still considerable. After failed fibrinolytic administration, rescue PCI is recommended for patients in cardiogenic shock who are <75 years old, patients with severe heart failure or pulmonary edema, patients with hemodynamically compromising ventricular arrhythmias, and patients in whom fibrinolytic therapy has failed and a moderate or large area of myocardium is at risk. Because tissue plasminogen activator, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator, and tenecteplase have similar efficacy and safety profiles, the choice of which to use is usually based on ease of administration, cost, and the local preferences. Contraindications to fibrinolytic therapy are those that increase the risk of hemorrhage ( Table 49-10). The most catastrophic complication is intracranial bleeding. Clinical variables that can be assessed in the ED and predict an increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage are age (>65 years old), low body mass (<70 kg), and hypertension on presentation. 6 Intracranial hemorrhage is more common with tissue plasminogen activator than with streptokinase (odds ratio of 1.6). Patients with relative contraindications may still receive fibrinolytic therapy when the benefits of therapy outweigh the risks of the complications. Patients treated with fibrinolytics benefit from early follow-up invasive intervention, called pharmacoinvasive therapy. 45 In the TRANSFER- AMI study, high-risk patients treated with fibrinolytics for STEMI at non–PCI-capable centers were randomized to standard care or immediate transfer for PCI within 6 hours after fibrinolysis. 46 The patients who underwent the pharmacoinvasive strategy had a 6.2% absolute reduction in the composite end point of death, reinfarction, recurrent ischemia, new or worsening heart failure, or cardiogenic shock at 30 days. Facilitated PCI refers to a planned initial pharmacologic treatment followed by PCI for treatment of STEMI. The ASSENT-4 PCI trial found no benefit and a higher incidence of death, congestive heart failure, or shock at 90 days in the group receiving fibrinolytics compared with the PCI-only group. Current guidelines state that a facilitated approach might be considered in high-risk patients with low bleeding risk with long duration to PCI. 6 However, no clear benefits are apparent for this method. Fibrinolytic therapy in STEMI is limited in several ways. First, even the most potent fibrinolytic agents do not achieve early and complete restoration of coronary blood flow in 40% to 50% of patients. Fibrinolytics are plasminogen activators. When fibrin is lysed, thrombin is exposed. The exposed thrombin is a potent biologic platelet activator. As a result, the more fibrin that is lysed, the more thrombin is exposed, and the more prothrombotic substrate is engendered. This may be one reason why optimal antithrombin therapy (enoxaparin rather than unfractionated heparin) and dual antiplatelet therapy (both aspirin and clopidogrel) lead to improved outcomes. The second limitation of fibrinolytic therapy is that approximately 0.5% to 1.0% of patients have intracranial hemorrhage, which usually results in death or disabling stroke. STEMI patients who received fibrinolytics should get full-dose anticoagulants for a minimum of 48 hours.

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clopidogrel) lead to improved outcomes. The second limitation of fibrinolytic therapy is that approximately 0.5% to 1.0% of patients have intracranial hemorrhage, which usually results in death or disabling stroke. STEMI patients who received fibrinolytics should get full-dose anticoagulants for a minimum of 48 hours. 6 Recommended therapies include unfractionated heparin, enoxaparin, or fondaparinux.6,7 ANTIPLATELET AGENTS The glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonists are stronger antiplatelet agents than aspirin, interrupting platelet activation regardless of the agonist. In contrast, aspirin only inhibits platelet aggregation stimulated through thromboxane A 2 and mediated through the arachidonic acid pathway.  ASPIRIN Give aspirin, ≥162 milligrams and preferably 325 milligrams if naive of aspirin, as soon as possible to all patients with STEMI, NSTEMI, and unstable angina. Aspirin prevents formation of thromboxane A 2, an agonist of platelet aggregation. This inhibition persists for the 8- to 12-day life of the platelet, because platelets are unable to generate new cyclooxygenase. In patients with STEMI, aspirin alone reduces relative mortality rate by 23%. 6 The estimated number needed to treat to aid is 41 patients, with the number needed to harm (nondangerous bleed ing) being 167 patients. 47 Aspirin used in conjunction with fibrinolytic therapy further reduces ischemic events and coronary artery reocclu sion. Aspirin doses >162 milligrams cause immediate, near-complete inhibition of thromboxane A 2. Smaller doses may not be effective for acute use. Aspirin reduces vascular events in patients with AMI and patients with unstable angina, especially in those with prior myocardial infarction or stroke (decrease by about 4%). The side effects of aspirin are mainly GI, accumulative, and dose related. Diluted or buffered aspirin solutions, lowest possible doses, or concurrent antacid or H 2 antagonist administration reduces aspirin harm. Due to the benefits during ACS, do not withhold early aspirin from patients with minor contraindications (vague allergy, history of remote peptic ulcer, or GI bleeding). 6 Other antiplatelet agents such as clopidogrel are alternatives if true aspirin allergy or active peptic ulcer disease exists.  ADENOSINE DIPHOSPHATE RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS Prasugrel Prasugrel is an irreversible, potent platelet receptor antagonist in this class. In the TRITON-TIMI 38 trial, prasugrel compared favorably with clopidogrel, 48 reducing the primary composite outcome by an absolute 2.2%, although with an increased frequency of bleeding. In post hoc analysis, this increased bleeding risk was greatest in patients with a history of stroke and patients age ≥75 years. 49 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning for prasugrel, indicating use is contraindicated in patients with a prior cerebrovascular accident or transient ischemic attack or with pathologic bleeding. Additional risk factors for bleeding are age ≥75 years, propensity for bleeding, and concomitant use of medications that increase the risk of bleed ing. Prasugrel has only been studied in patients with known coronary anatomy, so it has limited generalizability to ED patients. Ticagrelor Ticagrelor is a reversible nonthienopyridine P2Y12 recep tor antagonist, with the effect gone within 3 days of stopping the agent. The PLATO study compared ticagrelor to clopidogrel 50 in patients with ACS (with or without ST elevation). The composite primary outcome in those treated with ticagrelor was decreased by an absolute frequency of 1.9% without any difference in major bleeding.

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st, with the effect gone within 3 days of stopping the agent. The PLATO study compared ticagrelor to clopidogrel 50 in patients with ACS (with or without ST elevation). The composite primary outcome in those treated with ticagrelor was decreased by an absolute frequency of 1.9% without any difference in major bleeding. In patients with STEMI TABLE 49-10 Contraindications to Fibrinolytic Therapy in ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction Absolute contraindications •  Any  prior intracranial hemorrhage •  Known  structural cerebral vascular lesion (e.g., arteriovenous malformation) •  Known  intracranial neoplasm •  Ischemic  stroke within 3 mo •  Active  internal bleeding (excluding menses) •  Suspected  aortic dissection or pericarditis Relative contraindications •  Severe  uncontrolled blood pressure (>180/100 mm Hg) •  History  of chronic, severe, poorly controlled hypertension •   History of prior ischemic stroke >3 mo or known intracranial pathology not covered in contraindications •   Current use of anticoagulants with known INR >2–3; no evidence with direct oral anticoagulants available as of this writing, but safety data can be extracted from stroke studies with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator and direct oral anticoagulants •  Known  bleeding diathesis •  Recent  trauma (past 2 wk) •  Prolonged  CPR (>10 min) •  Major  surgery (<3 wk) •   Noncompressible vascular punctures (including subclavian and internal jugular central lines) •  Recent  internal bleeding (within 2–4 wk) •  Patients treated previously with streptokinase should not receive streptokinase a second time •  Pregnancy •  Active  peptic ulcer disease •  Other  medical conditions likely to increase risk of bleeding (e.g., diabetic retinopathy) Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 346 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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nternal bleeding (within 2–4 wk) •  Patients treated previously with streptokinase should not receive streptokinase a second time •  Pregnancy •  Active  peptic ulcer disease •  Other  medical conditions likely to increase risk of bleeding (e.g., diabetic retinopathy) Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 346 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 347 undergoing PCI, there was an increase in stroke in patients receiving ticagrelor (1.7% vs. 1.0%, P = 0.02). Clopidogrel The addition of clopidogrel to aspirin and antithrombin therapy improves cardiovascular outcomes in patients receiving fibrinolysis for STEMI. The CLARITY-TIMI 28 trial51 and the COMMIT trial52 both demonstrated improvements in hospital and 30-day outcomes with the addition of clopidogrel to standard therapy. The American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association STEMI guidelines consider this dual therapy a Class I, level of evidence A recommendation. Clopidogrel reduces a composite outcome of death, AMI, and stroke in patients with unstable angina/NSTEMI. The CURE trial randomized patients with unstable angina/NSTEMI to clopidogrel (300-milligram loading dose and 75-milligram daily dose) or placebo, 53 with all patients receiving aspirin. The clopidogrel group had a 20% reduction in death, AMI, or stroke between 3 and 12 months. There was an excess of bleeding in the clopidogrel group compared with controls; however, this was reduced in patients who received lower doses of aspirin. Give clopidogrel to patients with true aspirin allergy. Use this agent early in patients with ACS regardless of whether noninvasive management or PCI is planned. 54 For patients undergoing urgent PCI, 600 milligrams is superior to 300 milligrams in preventing postprocedure myocardial infarction. 55,56 However, the results of the CURRENT- OASIS-7 trial reported that although increasing the clopidogrel dose to 600 milligrams caused a decrease in ischemic events, there was also an increased rate of bleeding. 57 Therefore, the current guidelines still pro vide a clopidogrel dose range of 300 to 600 milligrams in patients with unstable angina/NSTEMI. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued warnings on the efficacy of clopidogrel in two selected patient groups. First, patients taking omeprazole experience an approximately 50% reduction in the antiplatelet aggregation effects of clopidogrel. Second, patients with the variant CYP2C19 gene have impaired metabolism of clopidogrel and hence a reduced ability to convert the drug to its active form, leading to an increase in stent thromboses and recurrent ischemic events. Consider alternative antiplatelet agents in this group of patients. Because of an increased bleeding risk, withhold clopidogrel for 5 days before coronary artery bypass grafting when possible. About 5% to 20% of patients with unstable angina/NSTEMI eventually have near-term coronary artery bypass grafting; do not withhold clopidogrel unless coronary artery bypass grafting is imminent. Cangrelor Cangrelor is an intravenous adenosine diphosphate recep tor inhibitor that has been shown to reduce ischemic events in patients who undergo PCI when compared to clopidogrel. The proportion of STEMI patients in trials evaluating this agent is low; therefore, the level of recommendation for use by the European Society of Cardiology is Class IIb.  GLYCOPROTEIN IIB/IIIA INHIBITORS Abciximab is a chimeric antibody that binds irreversibly to the glyco protein IIb/IIIa antagonists. The duration of action is longer than that of the smaller peptide molecules. Eptifibatide is a synthetic heptapeptide that binds reversibly to the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor. Tirofiban is a synthetic small molecule with reversible binding to the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor.

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he glyco protein IIb/IIIa antagonists. The duration of action is longer than that of the smaller peptide molecules. Eptifibatide is a synthetic heptapeptide that binds reversibly to the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor. Tirofiban is a synthetic small molecule with reversible binding to the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor. All require an IV infusion to demonstrate sustained benefits. Reversal of platelet inhibition after cessation of infusion is more rapid with the polypeptide or small-molecule agents eptifibatide or tirofiban, an advantage when bleeding complications occur. Despite potential benefits, routine initiation of a glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor in the ED is not recommended due to conflicting information about the timing of PCI after administration and potential for bleeding. The glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor recommendations include patients with high-risk features, such as positive troponins, or patients treated with an early invasive strategy, but initiation prior to catheterization does not have proven benefit over initiation in the catheterization laboratory. Four large trials evaluated glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonists for the medical stabilization of patients with unstable angina/NSTEMI. Tirofiban and eptifibatide reduced the rates of the triple composite end point of death, AMI, and recurrent ischemia. However, abciximab did not benefit patients who did not undergo coronary angiography within 48 hours. Thus, the American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology guidelines for the management of unstable angina/ NSTEMI patients make administration of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors in patients treated with an early invasive strategy who are intermediate/high risk a Class IIb recommendation with eptifibatide and tirofiban the preferred agents.  ANTITHROMBINS Unfractionated Heparin Unfractionated heparin reduces the risk of AMI and death during the acute phase of unstable angina. The combination therapy of aspirin and heparin reduces the short-term risk of death or AMI by 56% compared with aspirin alone. When unfractionated heparin is used in combination with aspirin, recurrence of ischemia is diminished after cessation of the infusion. Thus, combination therapy with aspirin and heparin is indicated for patients with ACS . Unfractionated heparin has an unpredictable anticoagulant response because the bioavailability of heparin is variable. Even in clinical trials, less than half of patients are appropriately anticoagulated within 24 hours. Unfractionated heparin requires careful laboratory monitor ing and dose adjustment. The weight-adjusted regimen is recommended, with an initial bolus of 60 units/kg (maximum of 4000 units per American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology guidelines 1,6) and an infusion of 12 units/kg/h (maximum, 1000 units/h 1,6). Unfractionated heparin dosing according to the European Society of Cardiology is 70 to 100 units/kg IV bolus when no glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor is planned and 50 to 60 units/kg IV bolus when given with glycopro tein IIb/IIIa inhibitors. 7 Optimally, cease unfractionated heparin after 48 hours of therapy to reduce the risk of developing heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.6 Use other agents if ongoing anticoagulation is needed. Low-Molecular-Weight Heparins The low-molecular-weight heparins have greater bioavailability, lower protein binding, and a longer half-life, and achieve a more reliable anticoagulant effect. As a result, they are given in a fixed dose subcutaneously once or twice a day and achieve a stable therapeutic response without the need for monitoring anticoagulation. Large clinical trials show that enoxaparin, rather than unfractionated heparin, improved outcome in STEMI patients treated with aspirin and fibrinolysis.

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a result, they are given in a fixed dose subcutaneously once or twice a day and achieve a stable therapeutic response without the need for monitoring anticoagulation. Large clinical trials show that enoxaparin, rather than unfractionated heparin, improved outcome in STEMI patients treated with aspirin and fibrinolysis. 60 Enoxaparin is not considered a first-line antithrombin for patients receiving primary PCI for treatment of STEMI6; however, in the event that a patient previously started on enoxaparin goes for PCI, enoxaparin should be continued. A meta-analysis of six trials comparing enoxaparin with unfraction ated heparin demonstrates a 0.9% reduction in death or recurrent AMI in patients receiving enoxaparin rather than unfractionated heparin, in addition to other standard therapies. 61 The benefit of enoxaparin is greater in patients with higher risk, with a significant decrease in the composite end point of death, AMI, and recurrent ischemia requiring PCI at 14 days in patients with a Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarc tion risk score of >3. Trials with high rates of PCI have demonstrated the safety and efficacy of low-molecular-weight heparins in patients receiving PCI. The SYNERGY trial demonstrated improved outcomes in patients with consistent therapy (use of a single antithrombin from the ED through the catheterization laboratory) and increased bleeding when the patient was changed from one antithrombin to another. The best approach is for the emergency physician and cardiologist to work in collaboration to choose the antithrombin agent used from ED through PCI and aftercare. If coronary artery bypass grafting is planned, hold low-molecular-weight heparin for 12 to 24 hours, bridging with unfractionated heparin. Fondaparinux Fondaparinux is a synthetic pentasaccharide that binds to antithrombin III to form an antithrombic complex, but unlike hepa rin, this complex is very specific for factor Xa inhibition. Fondaparinux has been evaluated in two large clinical trials. In STEMI patients, it has similar efficacy to unfractionated heparin in patients receiving fibrino lytics or primary PCI. However, the European Society of Cardiology does not recommend fondaparinux in patients going for PCI. 7 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines make the following caution: fondaparinux is not a monotherapy for PCI; if used, add unfractionated heparin or bivalirudin before PCI. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 347 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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logy does not recommend fondaparinux in patients going for PCI. 7 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines make the following caution: fondaparinux is not a monotherapy for PCI; if used, add unfractionated heparin or bivalirudin before PCI. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 347 8/2/19 6:42 PM 348 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease In unstable angina/NSTEMI patients, bleeding was lower in fondaparinux-treated versus enoxaparin-treated patients. For NSTEMI patients in whom conservative management is to be used, the American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines recommended fondaparinux over enoxaparin, 62 as did the European Society of Cardiology,29 but it is not yet U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved for this indication. Direct Thrombin Inhibitor: Bivalirudin Direct thrombin inhibitors bind to the catalytic site of thrombin, bind to thrombin in clot, and are resistant to agents that degrade heparin. Bivalirudin reduces the short-term risk of postischemic complications relative to high-dose unfractionated heparin in patients undergoing PCI for unstable or postinfarction angina. The ACUITY trial demonstrated that bivaliru din is safe and effective for intermediate- to high-risk unstable angina/ NSTEMI patients receiving PCI. 62 The HORIZONS-AMI trial showed that, in patients with STEMI who are undergoing PCI, anticoagulation with bivalirudin alone, as compared with unfractionated heparin plus glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors, resulted in significantly reduced 30-day rates of major bleeding. LIMITING INFARCT SIZE  NITRATES Nitrates relax vascular smooth muscle in arteries, arterioles, and veins through the metabolic conversion of organic nitrates to nitric oxide. The pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, systemic arterial pressure, and left ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic volumes decrease. Reductions in right and left ventricular filling pressures that result from peripheral dilatation combined with afterload reduction that results from arte rial dilatation decrease cardiac work and myocardial O 2 requirements. Nitroglycerin has direct vasodilator effects on the coronary vascular bed and increases global and regional myocardial blood flows. When obstructing atherosclerotic lesions contain intact vascular smooth muscle, nitrates may dilate these vessels, thereby improving blood flow. Platelet aggregation is also inhibited by nitroglycerin. When nitroglycerin is used in AMI patients not treated with thrombolytics, it reduces infarct size, improves regional function, and decreases the rate of cardiovascular complications. The mortality rate is lowered by 35% with the use of nitrates. It is important to note that in most studies, IV nitroglycerin titration to 10% reduction in mean arterial pressure for normotensive patients and to 30% reduction in mean arterial pres sure for hypertensive patients occurred, not for symptom resolution. In AMI, titrate IV nitroglycerin to blood pressure reduction rather than to symptom (chest pain) resolution. Data are confounded regarding a benefit of nitroglycerin in those receiving fibrinolytic therapy. The American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association recommends the use of IV nitroglycerin for the first 24 to 48 hours for patients with STEMI and recurrent ischemia, congestive heart failure, or hypertension. 5 Benefits are likely to be greatest in patients not receiving concurrent fibrinolytic therapy. For unstable angina/NSTEMI, IV nitroglycerin is used in patients who are not responsive to sublingual nitroglycerin tablets. The most serious side effect of nitroglycerin is hypotension, which may result in reflex tachycardia and worsening ischemia; paradoxical bradycardia can also follow nitrate use.

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inolytic therapy. For unstable angina/NSTEMI, IV nitroglycerin is used in patients who are not responsive to sublingual nitroglycerin tablets. The most serious side effect of nitroglycerin is hypotension, which may result in reflex tachycardia and worsening ischemia; paradoxical bradycardia can also follow nitrate use. Use nitroglycerin cautiously in patients with inferior wall ischemia, because one third of such patients might have right ventricular involvement; nitrates reduce preload and commonly trigger hypotension in this setting, worsening infarct. If nitroglycerin results in hypotension, stop the drug and administer fluid for blood pressure. Avoid nitrates in patients with ACS who recently received a phosphodiesterase inhibitor for erectile dysfunction (within 24 hours of sildenafil use or within 48 hours of tadalafil use).  β -BLOCKERS β-Adrenergic antagonists have antidysrhythmic, anti-ischemic, and antihypertensive properties. During AMI, they diminish myocardial O demand by decreasing heart rate, systemic arterial pressure, and myo cardial contractility. Prolongation of diastole may augment perfusion to ischemic myocardium. Contemporary trials show no benefit from early β-blocker therapy, and data from one large trial have changed the guideline recommenda tions for β-antagonists.64 The COMMIT/CCS-2 trial randomized 45,852 patients within 24 hours of myocardial infarction symptom onset to receive either IV metoprolol followed by PO metoprolol or placebo. Metoprolol reduced the absolute risks of reinfarction by 5 per 1000 and of ventricular fibrillation by 5 per 1000, but importantly, it increased the risk of cardiogenic shock by 11 per 1000 . Overall, metoprolol did not significantly reduce mortality in the hospital. 64,65 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association rec ommendations are to start PO (not IV) β-antagonists in patients with STEMI or NSTEMI within 24 hours provided the patient has none of the following: (1) signs of heart failure, (2) evidence of a low cardiac output state, (3) increased risk for cardiogenic shock (cumulatively: age >70 years old, systolic blood pressure <120 mm Hg, sinus tachycardia >110 beats/min or bradycardia <60 beats/min, and longer duration of STEMI symptoms before diagnosis and treatment), or (4) standard relative contraindications to β-blockade (PR interval >0.24 seconds, secondor third-degree heart block, active asthma, or reactive airway disease). 1,6 IV therapy is reserved for patients with significant hypertension.  ANGIOTENSIN-CONVERTING ENZYME INHIBITORS Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors reduce left ventricular dysfunction and left ventricular dilatation and slow the development of congestive heart failure during AMI. Oral angiotensin-converting enzyme therapy lowers mortality after AMI. The American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association recommend that patients with STEMI or heart failure receive treatment with oral angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors within the first 24 hours ( not necessarily in the ED ). 6 For unstable angina/NSTEMI, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors should be administered within the first 24 hours in patients with pulmonary congestion or a left ventricular ejection fraction <40%, in the absence of hypotension or contraindications. Contraindications to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors include hypotension, bilateral renal artery stenosis, renal failure, or history of cough or angioedema due to prior angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor use. The efficacy of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in unstable angina has not been well evaluated.

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ndications to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors include hypotension, bilateral renal artery stenosis, renal failure, or history of cough or angioedema due to prior angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor use. The efficacy of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in unstable angina has not been well evaluated.  MAGNESIUM Magnesium produces systemic and coronary vasodilatation, possesses antiplatelet activity, suppresses automaticity, and protects myocytes from calcium influx during reperfusion. However, studies are conflict ing: some have found that the mortality rate is reduced, whereas others have shown no benefit at all. In light of these conflicting data, correct documented hypomagnesemia during AMI and give magnesium for torsades de pointes–type ventricular tachycardia or with a prolonged QT interval. 6 Magnesium bolus and infusion in high-risk patients, such as the elderly and those in whom reperfusion therapy is not suitable, are considered possibly beneficial.  CALCIUM CHANNEL ANTAGONISTS Calcium channel blockers have antianginal, vasodilatory, and antihypertensive properties. Calcium antagonists do not reduce mortality rate after AMI, and they may be harmful to some patients with cardiovascular disease.6 Verapamil and diltiazem are potentially beneficial in patients with ongoing ischemia or atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response who do not have congestive heart failure, left ventricular dysfunction, or atrioventricular block, and when β-adrenergic antagonists are contraindicated. COMPLICATIONS OF ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Myocardial perfusion and cardiac function affect blood flow to the entire body. As a result, any end organ can be damaged when car diac pump function is decreased. In this section, discussion of the Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 348 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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gonists are contraindicated. COMPLICATIONS OF ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME Myocardial perfusion and cardiac function affect blood flow to the entire body. As a result, any end organ can be damaged when car diac pump function is decreased. In this section, discussion of the Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 348 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 349 TABLE 49-11 Early Dysrhythmias After Acute Myocardial Infarction Dysrhythmia Frequency of Occurrence (%) Bradydysrhythmias Sinus bradycardia 35–40 First-degree AV block 4–15 Second-degree AV block, type I 4–10 Second-degree AV block, type II 0.5–1.0 Third-degree AV block 5–8 Asystole 1–5 Tachydysrhythmias Sinus tachycardia 30–35 Atrial premature contractions 50 Supraventricular tachycardia 2–9 Atrial fibrillation 4–10 Atrial flutter 1–2 Ventricular premature beats 99 Accelerated idioventricular rhythm 50–70 Ventricular tachycardia, nonsustained 60–69 Ventricular tachycardia, sustained 2–6 Ventricular fibrillation 4–7 Abbreviation: AV = atrioventricular. complications of ACS is limited to the direct effects on the heart. The systemic effects of cardiac function are discussed in organ-appropriate chapters of this book.  DYSRHYTHMIAS AND CONDUCTION DISTURBANCES The genesis, diagnosis, and treatment of dysrhythmias are presented in Chapter 18, “Cardiac Rhythm Disturbances. ” The effect dysrhythmias have in complicating the course of patients with ACS is the subject of this section. Dysrhythmias occur in 72% to 100% of AMI patients treated in the coronary care unit. Table 49-11 shows the approximate frequency of the various dysrhythmias observed in patients with AMI. Many dysrhyth mias occur in the prehospital and ED settings. The main consequences of dysrhythmias are impaired hemodynamic performance, compromised myocardial viability due to increased myocardial O 2 requirements, and predisposition to even more serious rhythm disturbances due to diminished ventricular fibrillation threshold. (See Video: Zoll Live Vest.) Wearable Cardioverter-Defibrillators A wearable cardioverterdefibrillator, of which one is the LifeVest ® , is a cardiac monitor and a vest-like garment worn under clothing to monitor cardiac rhythm and automatically deliver cardioversion or defibrillation when a lethal dys rhythmia develops. It is often used as a bridge to automatic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator placement or immediately after STEMI. ED patients wearing a LifeVest ® or other such garment should keep the garment on in the ED. It can be removed for procedures or radiographs, as long as the patient is placed on a cardiac monitor and can be observed for the development of a life-threatening dysrhythmia. Do not cut the device off as it is usually a rented device and is returned to the company when no longer needed. As of this writing, whether the device can pre vent post–myocardial infarction sudden cardiac death is unclear. The hemodynamic consequences of dysrhythmias are dependent on ventricular function. Patients with left ventricular dysfunction have a relatively fixed stroke volume. They depend on changes in heart rate to alter cardiac output. The range of heart rate that is optimal becomes narrowed with increasing dysfunction. Slower or faster heart rates may further depress cardiac output. In addition, maintenance of the atrial filling of the ventricle (or “the atrial kick”) is important for patients with AMI. Patients with normal hearts have a loss of 10% to 20% of left ventricular output when the atrial kick is eliminated. Patients with reduced left ventricular compli ance, common in AMI, have up to 35% reduction in stroke volume when the atrial systole is eliminated.

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“the atrial kick”) is important for patients with AMI. Patients with normal hearts have a loss of 10% to 20% of left ventricular output when the atrial kick is eliminated. Patients with reduced left ventricular compli ance, common in AMI, have up to 35% reduction in stroke volume when the atrial systole is eliminated. “Pump” failure with resultant increased sympathetic stimulation can also result in sinus tachycardia, atrial fibrillation or flutter, and supraventricular tachycardias. Sinus tachycardia is quite prominent in patients with anterior wall AMI. Because of increased myocardial O 2 use, persistent sinus tachycardia is associated with a poor prognosis in AMI; seek the cause and resolve it. Causes may include anxiety, pain, left ventricular failure, fever, pericarditis, hypovolemia, atrial infarction, pulmonary emboli, or use of medications that accelerate heart rate. Similarly, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation, and atrial flutter are associated with an increased mortality. Atrial fibrillation associated with AMI most typically occurs in the first 24 hours and is usually transient. It more often occurs in patients with excess catecholamine release, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hypoxia, chronic lung disease, and sinus node or left circumflex ischemia. Patients with supraventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation, or atrial flutter who have hemodynamic compromise are best treated with direct current cardioversion (see Chapter 18). Patients who are partially or fully com pensated or who do not respond to cardioversion can receive amiodarone or β-adrenergic antagonists to slow the ventricular rate 67 absent any contraindications. Patients with ongoing ischemia but without hemodynamic compromise, clinical left ventricular dysfunction, reactive airway disease, or heart block should have rate control with β-adrenergic antagonists, such as atenolol (2.5 to 5.0 milligrams over 2 minutes to a total of 10 milligrams) or metoprolol (2.5 to 5.0 milligrams every 2 to 5 minutes to a total of 15 milligrams). Patients with contraindications to β-adrenergic antagonists can be treated with digoxin (0.3- to 0.5-milligram initial bolus with a repeat dose in 4 hours) or a calcium channel antagonist. 6 Anticoagulate patients with atrial fibrillation and AMI to limit systemic embolization. Sinus bradycardia without hypotension does not appear to increase mortality during AMI. Prognosis is related to the site of infarction, the site of the block (intranodal vs. infranodal), the type of escape rhythm, and the hemodynamic response to the rhythm. Atropine is used for sinus bradycardia when it results in hypotension, ischemia, or ventricular escape rhythms and for treatment of symptomatic atrioventricular block occurring at the atrioventricular nodal level (e.g., second-degree type I). Atropine can improve heart rate, systemic vascular resistance, and blood pressure; use it with caution in the setting of AMI since the parasympathetic tone is protective against infarct extension, ventricular fibrillation, and excessive myocardial O 2 demand. Complete heart block can occur in patients with anterior and infe rior AMI because the atrioventricular conduction system receives blood supply from the atrioventricular branch of the right coronary artery and the septal perforating branch of the left anterior descending coronary artery. In the absence of right ventricular involvement, the mortality is approximately 15%. It rises to >30% when right ventricular involvement is present. Complete heart block in the setting of an anterior myocardial infarction portends a grave prognosis. Junctional rhythms are usually transient and occur within 48 hours of infarction.

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nce of right ventricular involvement, the mortality is approximately 15%. It rises to >30% when right ventricular involvement is present. Complete heart block in the setting of an anterior myocardial infarction portends a grave prognosis. Junctional rhythms are usually transient and occur within 48 hours of infarction. The increased mortality in patients with heart block during AMI is related to more extensive myocardial damage and not to the heart block itself. As a result, pacing does not reduce mortality in patients with atrioventricular block or intraventricular conduction delay. Nonetheless, pacing is recommended to protect against sudden hypotension, acute ischemia, and precipitation of ventricular dysrhythmias in certain patients. Use temporary transcutaneous pacers in patients at moderate to high risk of progression to atrioventricular block (Table 49-12). Transvenous pacing follows for patients with a high likelihood (>30%) of requiring permanent pacing (Table 49-12). Patients with right ventricular infarc tion who are very dependent on atrial systole may require atrioventricular sequential pacing to maintain cardiac output. Ventricular premature contractions are common in patients with AMI and are benign. Accelerated idioventricular rhythms in patients with AMI do not affect prognosis or require treatment. Ventricular tachycardia shortly after AMI is often transient and does not confer a poor prognosis. When ventricular tachycardia occurs late in the course of AMI, it is usually associated with transmural infarction and left ventricular dysfunction, induces hemodynamic deterioration, and is associated with a mortality rate approaching 50%. Primary ventricular fibrillation occurring shortly after symptom onset does not appear to have a large effect on mortality and prognosis, as long as it is quickly and Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 349 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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function, induces hemodynamic deterioration, and is associated with a mortality rate approaching 50%. Primary ventricular fibrillation occurring shortly after symptom onset does not appear to have a large effect on mortality and prognosis, as long as it is quickly and Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 349 8/2/19 6:42 PM 350 SECTION 7: Cardiovascular Disease effectively treated. Delayed or secondary ventricular fibrillation during hospitalization is associated with severe ventricular dysfunction and 75% in-hospital mortality. New right bundle branch block occurs in approximately 2% of AMI patients, most commonly with anteroseptal AMI; it is associated with an increased mortality and complete atrioventricular block. New left bundle branch block occurs in <10% of patients with AMI and is also associated with a higher mortality than in patients without left bundle branch block. Recognizing STEMI in the presence of left bundle branch block is difficult, 9 and due to this uncertainty and false catheterization lab activation, new or suspected new left bundle branch block alone has been removed from the most recent recommendations for emergency perfusion. 6 The left posterior fascicle is larger than the left anterior fas cicle. Thus, left posterior hemiblock is associated with a higher mortality than is isolated left anterior hemiblock, because it represents a larger area of infarction. Bifascicular block (right bundle branch block and a left hemiblock) has an increased likelihood of progression to complete heart block; it represents a large infarction and has more frequent pump failure and greater mortality. 24 See Chapter 18, “Cardiac Rhythm Disturbances, ” for more detail.  HEART FAILURE Approximately 15% to 20% of patients with AMI present with some degree of heart failure. One third of these patients have circulatory shock. In AMI, heart failure occurs from diastolic dysfunction alone or a combination of systolic and diastolic dysfunction. Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction leads to pulmonary congestion. Systolic dysfunction is responsible for decreased forward flow, reduced cardiac output, and reduced ejection fraction. In general, the more severe the degree of left ventricular dysfunction, the higher is the mortality. The degree of left ventricular dysfunction in any single patient depends on the net effect of prior myocardial dysfunction (prior myocardial infarction or cardiomyopathy), baseline myocardial hypertrophy, acute myocardial necrosis, and acute reversible myocardial dysfunction (“stunned myo cardium”). For further discussion, see Chapter 50, “Cardiogenic Shock, ” and Chapter 53, “ Acute Heart Failure. ” Mortality for patients with AMI increases as cardiac output decreases or pulmonary congestion increases, with mortality rates as follows: no heart failure, 10%; mild heart failure, 15% to 20%; frank pulmonary edema, 40%; and cardiogenic shock, 50% to 80%. Elevated levels of B-type natriuretic peptide or pro-B-type natriuretic peptide early in the hospital course portend a worse 30-day outcome. The presence of shock in AMI results in a complex spiral relationship. Coronary obstruction leads to myocardial ischemia, which impairs myocardial contractility and ventricular outflow. The resulting reduc tion in arterial blood pressure leads to further decreases in coronary arterial perfusion, resulting in worsening myocardial ischemia and more severe myocardial necrosis. Interruption of this downward spiral requires careful attention to fluid management and the use of inotropic agents. Resolution of ischemia and preventing or minimizing the area of stunned myocardium that progresses to infarction are imperative; guidelines recommend that patients with STEMI and cardiogenic shock who are <75 years of age should be considered for PCI.

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reful attention to fluid management and the use of inotropic agents. Resolution of ischemia and preventing or minimizing the area of stunned myocardium that progresses to infarction are imperative; guidelines recommend that patients with STEMI and cardiogenic shock who are <75 years of age should be considered for PCI. 6 For further discussion, see Chapters 50 and 53.  MECHANICAL COMPLICATIONS Sudden decompensation of previously stable patients should raise concern for the mechanical complications of AMI. These complications usually involve the tearing or rupture of infarcted tissue, not seen in unstable angina. The clinical presentation of these entities depends on the site of rupture (papillary muscles, interventricular septum, or ven tricular free wall). Ventricular free wall rupture occurs in 10% of AMI fatalities, usually 1 to 5 days after infarction. Rupture of the left ventricular free wall usu ally leads to pericardial tamponade and death (in >90% of cases). Patients may complain of tearing pain or sudden onset of severe pain. They will be hypotensive and tachycardic and may have onset of confusion and agitation. Increased neck veins, decreased heart sounds, and pulsus paradoxus may be present. In the ED, echocardiography is the diagnostic test of choice. Near equalization of right atrial, right ventricular mid-diastolic, and right ventricular systolic pressures on pulmonary artery catheterization is also useful but seldom available in the ED. Treatment is surgical. Rupture of the interventricular septum is more often detected clinically than rupture of the ventricular free wall. The size of the defect determines the degree of left-to-right shunt and the ultimate progno sis. Clinically, interventricular septal rupture presents with chest pain, dyspnea, and sudden appearance of a new holosystolic murmur. The murmur is usually accompanied by a palpable thrill and is heard best at the lower left sternal border. Doppler echocardiography is the diagnostic procedure of choice. Demonstration of left-to-right shunt by pulmonary catheter blood sampling may be useful. An O 2 step-up of >10% from right atrial to right ventricular samples is diagnostic. Rupture of the interventricular septum is more common in patients with anterior wall myocardial infarction and patients with extensive (three-vessel) coro nary artery disease. Treatment is surgical. Papillary muscle rupture occurs in approximately 1% of patients with AMI, is more common with inferior myocardial infarction, and usually occurs 3 to 5 days after AMI. In contrast to rupture of the interventricular septum, papillary muscle rupture often occurs with a small- to modestsized AMI. Patients present with acute onset of dyspnea, increasing heart failure and pulmonary edema, and a new holosystolic murmur consistent with mitral regurgitation. The posteromedial papillary muscle is most commonly ruptured, because it receives blood supply from one coronary artery, usually the right coronary artery. Echocardiography often can distinguish rupture of a portion of the papillary muscle from other etiologies of mitral regurgitation. Treatment is surgical. 6,7  PERICARDITIS In the current era of early PCI intervention, early post-AMI pericarditis occurs in <5% of patients, 67 a drop from 20% since the 1980s. It is more common in patients with transmural AMI and delayed initial presenta tions. Pericarditis results from inflammation adjacent on the epicardial surface of a transmural infarction, often 2 to 4 days after AMI. Pericardial friction rubs are detected more often with inferior wall and right ventricular infarction, because the right ventricle lies immediately beneath the chest wall. The pain of pericarditis can be confused with that of infarct extension or post-AMI angina.

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of a transmural infarction, often 2 to 4 days after AMI. Pericardial friction rubs are detected more often with inferior wall and right ventricular infarction, because the right ventricle lies immediately beneath the chest wall. The pain of pericarditis can be confused with that of infarct extension or post-AMI angina. Classically, the discomfort of pericarditis becomes worse with a deep inspiration and may be relieved by sitting forward. Echocardiography may demonstrate a pericardial effusion; pericardial effusions are much more common than pericarditis and often are pres ent in the absence of pericarditis. Similarly, pericarditis can be present in the absence of a pericardial effusion. The resorption rate of post-AMI pericardial effusions is slow, often taking several months. Treatment is symptomatic with aspirin, 650 milligrams PO every 4 to 6 hours, or colchicine, 0.6 mg twice daily. Ibuprofen interferes with the antiplatelet TABLE 49-12 Indications for Temporary Pacemaker Placement Temporary transcutaneous pacemaker indications •   Unresponsive symptomatic bradycardia •   Mobitz II or higher AV blocks •   New LBBB and bifascicular blocks •   RBBB or LBBB with first-degree block •   Some cases with stable bradycardia and new or indeterminate-age RBBB Temporary transvenous pacemaker indications •   Asystole •   Unresponsive symptomatic bradycardia •   Mobitz II or higher AV blocks •   New or indeterminate-age LBBB •   Alternating bundle branch block •   RBBB or LBBB with first-degree block •   Consider in RBBB with left anterior or posterior hemiblocks •   Overdrive pacing in unresponsive ventricular tachycardia •   Unresponsive recurrent sinus pauses (>3 s) Abbreviations: AV = atrioventricular; LBBB = left bundle branch block; RBBB = right bundle branch block. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 350 8/2/19 6:42 PM

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ider in RBBB with left anterior or posterior hemiblocks •   Overdrive pacing in unresponsive ventricular tachycardia •   Unresponsive recurrent sinus pauses (>3 s) Abbreviations: AV = atrioventricular; LBBB = left bundle branch block; RBBB = right bundle branch block. Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 350 8/2/19 6:42 PM CHAPTER 49: Acute Coronary Syndromes 351 III aVR aVL aVF III aVR aVL aVF V1r V2r V3r V4r V5r V6r V1r V2r V3r V4r V5r V6r FIGURE 49-13. Right-sided leads demonstrating right ventricular infarction associated with inferior wall myocardial infarction. Right-sided leads have replaced the normal left-sided V leads. In this example, the ST-segment elevation is prominent in leads V 3R to V6R. effect of aspirin and can cause myocardial scar thinning and infarct expansion. Dressler’s syndrome (late post-AMI syndrome) occurs 2 to 10 weeks after AMI and presents with chest pain, fever, and pleuropericarditis. Dressler’s syndrome is treated with aspirin and colchicine. 68-70  RIGHT VENTRICULAR INFARCTION Isolated right ventricular infarction is extremely rare and is usually seen as a complication of an inferior infarction (Figures 49-6 and 49-13). The right ventricle most commonly receives its blood supply from the right coro nary artery. In patients with left dominant systems, the blood supply may come from the left circumflex. The anterior portion of the right ventricle is supplied by branches of the left anterior diagonal artery. Approximately 30% of inferior wall myocardial infarction involves the right ventricle. The presence of right ventricular infarction is associated with a significant increase in mortality and cardiovascular complications. Right ventricular infarction can be diagnosed by the presence of ST-segment elevation in the precordial V 4R lead in the setting of an inferior wall myocardial infarction (Figure 49-6). The presence of elevated neck veins or hypotension in response to nitroglycerin is also suggestive. Echocardiography or nuclear imaging can be diagnostic, but they are less readily available in the ED. The most serious complication of right ventricular infarction is shock. The severity of the hemodynamic derangement in the setting of right ventricular infarction is related to the extent of right ventricular dys function, the interaction between the ventricles (the right and left ventricles share the interventricular septum), and the interaction between the pericardium and the right ventricle. Right ventricular infarction results in a reduction in right ventricular end-systolic pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic size, cardiac output, and aortic pressure as the right ventricle becomes more of a passive conduit to blood flow. Left ventricular contraction causes bulging of the interventricular septum into the right ventricle, with resultant ejection of blood into the pulmo nary circulation. As a result, right ventricular infarction with concurrent left ventricular infarction has a particularly devastating effect on hemo dynamic function. Fluid balance and maintenance of adequate preload are critical in the treatment of right ventricular infarction. Factors that reduce preload (volume depletion, diuretics, and nitrates) or decrease right atrial contraction (atrial infarction and loss of atrioventricular synchrony) and factors that increase right ventricular afterload (left ventricular failure) can lead to significant hemodynamic derangements. Treatment of right ventricular infarction includes maintenance of preload, reduction of right ventricular afterload, and inotropic support of the ischemic right ventricle, in addition to early reperfusion. Patients with right ventricular infarction should not be treated with drugs, such as nitrates, that reduce preload.

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reatment of right ventricular infarction includes maintenance of preload, reduction of right ventricular afterload, and inotropic support of the ischemic right ventricle, in addition to early reperfusion. Patients with right ventricular infarction should not be treated with drugs, such as nitrates, that reduce preload. In the setting of right ventricular infarction, nitrates often will reduce cardiac output and produce hypotension. Instead, patients with marginal preload or hypotension should be treated with volume loading (normal saline). The increased preload will improve right ventricular cardiac output. If cardiac output is not improved after 1 to 2 L of normal saline, begin inotropic support. High-degree heart block is very common in patients with right ventricular infarction. The loss of right atrial contraction can greatly compromise right ventricular cardiac output. Restitution of atrioventricular synchrony is important. Patients who do not attain hemodynamic improvement after placement of a ventricular pacer may still improve with atrioventricular sequential pacing. When right ventricular infarction is accompanied by left ventricular dysfunction, the use of nitroprusside to reduce afterload or intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation may be of benefit. Reduction in left ventricular afterload may help passive movement of blood through the right ventricle.  OTHER COMPLICATIONS Other complications of AMI that occur but are not usually seen in the ED include left ventricular thrombus formation, arterial embolization, venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, postinfarction angina, and infarct extension. With the more rapid discharge of uncomplicated AMI patients, keep these possibilities in mind for patients who return to the ED shortly after hospital discharge.  RECURRENT OR REFRACTORY ISCHEMIA Patients unresponsive to medical management with continued ischemia require an individualized approach to treatment. Refractory ischemia is investigated with coronary catheterization. Treat patients with ACS after stent placement with antithrombin and antiplatelet therapy, and these patients may require urgent coronary catheterization. In situations where emergent catheterization is not available or the patient is hemodynamically unstable, an intra-aortic balloon pump may be used. Intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation delivers phased pulsations synchronized to the ECG, so that balloon inflation will occur at the time of aortic valve closure and deflation occurs just before onset of systole. The augmented coronary perfusion pressure during diastole enhances coronary blood flow. Balloon deflation during systole allows the left ventricle to eject blood against a lower resistance. The net effect of intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation is an increase in cardiac out put, reduction in systolic arterial pressure, increase in diastolic arterial pressure, little change in mean arterial pressure, and reduction in heart rate. The reduction in left ventricular afterload leads to reduced myo cardial O 2 consumption, thereby decreasing the amount of myocardial ischemia. Intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation is recommended for patients with ACS who are refractory to aggressive medical management Tintinalli_Sec07_p0329-0424.indd 351 8/2/19 6:42 PM