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The Evaluation Of Ischemia

The Evaluation Of Ischemia. Case.

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The Evaluation Of Ischemia

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  1. The Evaluation Of Ischemia

  2. Case • A 58 year old woman with diabetes and hypertension presents with symptoms of chronic chest pain. She reports that she can walk about 4 blocks at a moderate pace before developing squeezing chest pain, shortness of breath and diaphoresis that resolves with rest. An EKG in the office is normal.

  3. Case • What is the best next step? • Give her nitroglycerin sublingual and order a treadmill stress test • Refer for emergent angiography • Order nuclear perfusion imaging • Start ASA, BB, nitrates and monitor symptoms

  4. Case During a treadmill stress test she exercises for 6 minutes and stops for chest discomfort. There are infer-lateral ST depressions and nuclear imaging shows a moderate sized reversible inferior defect and no fixed defects. Which of the following is true? An angiogram followed by a stent will improve her symptoms An angiogram follow by a stent with improve her symptoms and prolong her life The patient should be sent for a CABG The patients medical therapy is not optimized

  5. CAD And Angina: Significant Morbidity and Mortality • Incidence 213/100,000 over 30 • Lifetime risk: nearly 50% men, 32% women • 13,200,000 with CAD, 6,500,000 with angina • 7,200,000 post MI • 53% of cardiovascular deaths • About 1 in 5 deaths in Americans • 142.5 billion in 2006 • 11.1 million deaths worldwide by 2020 Libby. Braunwald’s Heart Disease. 8th Ed.

  6. Cumulative Risk Of CAD Remains High In Advanced Age Lloyd-Jones. Lancet, 1999.

  7. Angina • Chest or surrounding area caused by ischemia • Brought on by exertion • No associated with myocardial necrosis • Variety of discomfort • Heavy, squeezing, pressure numb burning • Location • Substernal, arms, epigastric • Anginal equivalents • Dyspnea, faintness, fatigue • Duration • Better with rest or nitroglycerin

  8. Not Angina • Pleuritic pain • Highly localized pain • Reproduced by movement • Duration very long or very short • Pain radiating to the lower extremities • Resolution more than 5-10 minutes after nitrates or rest

  9. Features That Decrease The Liklihood Of Chest Pain Being Angina Panju. JAMA, 1998.

  10. Grading Angina • Class I: angina with strenuous activity • Class II: Slight limitation of ordinary activity • Class III: Marked limitation of ordinary activity • Class IV: Inability to do any physical activity or angina at rest Goldman. Circulation, 1981.

  11. If It Is Not From The Heart…. Panju. JAMA, 1998.

  12. Pathophysiology • Regional myocardial ischemia • Inadequate coronary blood flow • Increased myocardial oxygen demand

  13. Pathology of Atherosclerosis Abrams. NEJM, 2005.

  14. Factors Influencing Myocardial Oxygen Supply and Demand Libby. Braunwalds Heart Diseasea. 8th Ed.

  15. Cardiovascular Risk Assessment • Very high risk: no further estimation • Established vascular disease • Prior MI = 5-7x risk of recurrent MI • Prior stroke= 2-3x risk of MI • PVD = 4x risk of MI • Diabetes • Chronic kidney disease • Hereditary dislipidemia Canto. JAMA, 2003.

  16. Risk of MI In Diabetics With No History of CAD Haffner. NEJM, 1998.

  17. Why Assess Risk? • Required for determination of medical management • More than 90% of CHD events in patients with at least one risk factor

  18. Risk Factors Associated With CAD Yusuf. Lancet, 2004.

  19. Framingham Risk Calculator • Predicts risk of MI, CAD death and angina • Low risk <10% risk in 10 years • Intermediate 10-20% risk in 10 years • High risk >20% in 10 years

  20. Risk Assessment Tools: Framingham Risk Calculator

  21. Other Risk Calculators • SCORE • QRISK/QRISK 2 • Reynolds

  22. Limitations Of Risk Calculation • Falsely reassure patients with borderline risk factors • Does not consider lifetime risk • Inability to account for effects of current therapy • Variation in severity of first event • Variation by type of vascular disease

  23. High Sensitivity CRP: Additive Value? • Most patients with CAD have traditional risk factors • Unclear that CRP adds value in clinical practice to traditional risk factors

  24. Evaluation of Anginal Chest Pain • Risk factor assessment • Physical Examination • Resting electrocardiogram

  25. Asymptomatic Patients • No need for stress testing

  26. Non Invasive Stress Testing In Symptomatic Patients • Not useful for diagnosis of CAD in low risk or high risk patients • Useful if it will alter the planned management strategy

  27. Treadmill Stress Testing • Useful in patients who can: • Exercise on the treadmill adequately • Have a interpretable EKG

  28. Echo Stress Testing • Can be performed with exercise or with dobutamine • Requires adequate echo visualization of the heart

  29. Nuclear Stress Testing • Can be performed with exercise vasodilator drugs • Adenosine • Dipyridamole • Nuclear tracer is distributed in areas with normal blood flow • Requires contrast between areas of the heart • False negatives with global ischemia

  30. Sensitivity And Specificity Of Stress Testing Gibbons. JACC, 2002.

  31. High Risk Stress Test Features: Proceed to Angiography Gibbons. JACC, 2002.

  32. Moderate And Low Risk Exercise Testing Gibbons. JACC, 2002.

  33. CT Coronary Angiography • Sensitity 90% • Specificity 50% • Not recommended for clinical use

  34. Coronary Angiography • Gold standard for identification of significant CAD • Potential for revascularization • Cannot predict future site of plaque rupture and MI • Indications • Concern for left main or triple vessel disease • Poorly controlled symptoms • Ischemia at a low workload (5-6 mets) • Large or multiple defects or WMA

  35. Assessment of Left Ventricular Function • Echocardiography or nuclear study • Necessary for strategizing the approach to management

  36. Treat Medical Conditions That Can Worsen Ischemia • Anemia • Weight gain • Thyroid disease • Fever • Infections • Tachycardia • Cocaine

  37. Necessary Lifestyle Modification • Diet • Exercise • Work activities • Leisure activities • Avoidance of sudden exertion or isometric exercise • Sexual activity • If equivalent level of activity is well tolerated • Sildenafil cannot be taken with nitrates

  38. Hypertension Management • For adults, the risk of CAD double for every increase of 20 mmHg over SBP 115 • Predisposes to vascular injury, accelerates CAD, increases myocardial O2 demand and worsens ischemia • Goals of treatment • Less than 140/90 or • Less than 130/80 in DM or CKD

  39. Smoking Cessation Decreases MI Risk • Meta analysis of 20 studies • 30% reduction in risk of recurrent event in patients who quit smoking • The most effective and least expensive approach Critchley. JAMA, 2003.

  40. Goals Of Medical Management In Stable CAD • Improve mortality and morbidity • Manage symptoms • Improve treadmill performance and time to ST changes • Prevent progression of atherosclerotic disease • Requires adequate dosing and combination approach

  41. Aspirin • Myocardial infarction reduction of 34-87% • No difference in 81 vs 325 mg dose • Clopidogrel may substitute for aspirin in intolerant patients

  42. Nitrates • Nitrates • Systemic vasodilator -> reduced LV wall stress • Reduced myocardial oxygen demand • Acute or chronic treatment • Tolerance can develop • Improved ex tolerance, time to angina, and ST changes Chen. Proc Natl Acad Sci, 2002.

  43. Beta Blockers • Beta receptors • B1: increase HR, contractility, AV conduction • cardioselective • B2: vasodilation and bronchodilation • B3: catecholamine induced thermogenesis • Reduction in myocardial oxygen demand • Heart rate, contractility and wall stress • Improved mortality • Prior MI or heart failure

  44. ACE Inhibitors • No benefit in the reduction of ischemia • Benefits shown in patients with CAD and normal LV function • Improve endothelial functioning • HOPE Trial and EUROPA • 20-22% RR ischemic event HOPE Investigators. NEJM, 2000.

  45. Cholesterol Lowering Improves Mortality NCEP. NHLBI, 2003.

  46. Number Needed To Treat Is Low NCEP. NHLBI, 2003.

  47. LDL Target Based On Presence of Risk Factors

  48. After Reaching LDL Goals, Target Non-HDL Cholesterol, Then HDL • Total cholesterol – HDL= LDL + VLDL • 30 mg/dl higher than LDL goal • Treatment • Statin followed by niacin or fibrates • Low HDL: <40 • Treatment • Lifestyle modification • Niacin or fibrates

  49. Ranolazine: Novel Antianginal • No significant changes in heart rate or blood pressure • Reduction in calcium overload via inhibition of the late Na current • Improved exercise performance and time to ischemia • Slight prolongation of the the QT interval, but no association with TDP • Contraindicated in pre-existing QT prolongation

  50. Revascularization • CABG or PCI • No evidence for mortality reduction in patients with stable angina and normal LV function

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