Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) is a medical emergency that results from sudden, reduced blood flow to the heart. It includes: Unstable Angina (UA) โ No myocardial infarction (MI), but high risk.
Non-ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (NSTEMI) โ MI without ST elevation.
ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) โ MI with full-thickness heart damage.
Why Itโs Important:
Early recognition and rapid intervention reduce heart muscle damage.
Immediate treatment improves survival and prevents complications.
Timely reperfusion (PCI or fibrinolytics) is critical for STEMI patients.
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Classic Symptoms:
Chest pain or discomfort โ Pressure, squeezing, tightness, or burning sensation.
Pain radiation โ To arms, shoulders, neck, jaw, or back.
Associated Symptoms:
Shortness of breath
Nausea/vomiting
Diaphoresis (sweating)
Lightheadedness or syncope (fainting)
Key Takeaway: ACS should be suspected in ANY patient with chest discomfortโearly ECG and intervention are crucial!
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Ensure a patent airway.
Assess breathing and oxygenation (SpOโ goal: โฅ90%).
Monitor circulation (pulse, blood pressure, perfusion).
Essential to determine STEMI vs. NSTEMI/Unstable Angina.
STEMI requires immediate reperfusion therapy.
For medication administration and fluids.
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Medication | Dosage & Indication | Notes |
---|---|---|
M โ Morphine | 2-4 mg IV every 5-15 min PRN | For pain unrelieved by nitroglycerin. Avoid if hypotensive. |
O โ Oxygen | If SpOโ <90% | Routine oxygen is NOT needed unless hypoxic. |
N โ Nitroglycerin | 0.3-0.6 mg SL every 5 min (max 3 doses) | Avoid if SBP <90 mmHg, RV infarct, or PDE-5 inhibitors (e.g., Viagra). |
A โ Aspirin | 162-325 mg PO (chewed) | Give ASAP unless contraindicated. |
B โ Beta-Blockers | Metoprolol 5 mg IV every 5 min (Max: 15 mg) | Start within 24 hrs unless contraindicated. |
Key Takeaway: MONA-B is the foundation of early ACS treatment, but STEMI requires additional interventions!
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Feature | STEMI | NSTEMI/Unstable Angina |
---|---|---|
ECG Findings | ST elevation in โฅ2 contiguous leads | ST depression, T-wave inversion, or normal ECG |
Cardiac Biomarkers | Elevated troponins | Elevated (NSTEMI) or normal (UA) |
Pathophysiology | Complete coronary artery occlusion | Partial occlusion |
Treatment Goal | Immediate Reperfusion (PCI or Fibrinolytics) | Antiplatelets & Anticoagulation |
STEMI = EMERGENCY! Immediate PCI within 90 minutes OR fibrinolytics within 30 minutes.
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PCI (Percutaneous Coronary Intervention) = GOLD STANDARD!
Preferred if available within 90 minutes.
Coronary stent placement restores blood flow.
Fibrinolytic Therapy (If PCI Unavailable Within 120 Minutes)
Give within 30 minutes of arrival.
Examples:
Contraindications to Fibrinolytics:
Active bleeding, history of hemorrhagic stroke, recent major surgery, severe hypertension (>185/110).
Antiplatelet & Anticoagulation Therapy (For ALL STEMI Patients)
Dual Antiplatelet Therapy (DAPT)
Key Takeaway: Reperfusion within 90 minutes for PCI or 30 minutes for fibrinolysis saves lives!
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NSTEMI does NOT require immediate fibrinolysis.
Focus on medical therapy & risk stratification:
Antiplatelets (DAPT) โ Aspirin + Clopidogrel/Ticagrelor.
Anticoagulation โ Heparin or Enoxaparin.
Beta-Blockers โ Reduce myocardial oxygen demand.
Nitroglycerin โ For symptom relief.
Statins โ High-intensity therapy (e.g., Atorvastatin 80 mg).
Evaluate for PCI โ If high-risk, perform early invasive strategy.
Key Takeaway: NSTEMI is treated with aggressive medication management & risk-based PCI.
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STEMI patients MUST be transferred to a PCI-capable facility!
Primary PCI goal: Within 90 minutes of first medical contact.
Fibrinolytics if PCI unavailable within 120 minutes.
Ongoing monitoring for arrhythmias, hypotension, or worsening ischemia.
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Mistake | Impact | Prevention |
---|---|---|
Delaying ECG (>10 minutes) | Misses early STEMI diagnosis | Obtain ECG immediately! |
Not giving aspirin | Increased clot formation | Give 162-325 mg ASAP unless contraindicated. |
Using nitroglycerin in RV infarct | Can cause severe hypotension | Avoid NTG if ST elevation in leads II, III, aVF. |
Delaying reperfusion therapy | Increased myocardial damage | PCI within 90 min, fibrinolytics within 30 min! |
Key Takeaway: Time is muscleโdelays lead to worse outcomes!
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Recognize ACS early โ obtain a 12-lead ECG within 10 min.
MONA-B for all ACS patients (Morphine, Oxygen, Nitroglycerin, Aspirin, Beta-blockers).
STEMI requires immediate reperfusion (PCI or fibrinolytics).
NSTEMI is treated with medications and risk-based PCI.
Rapid transport to a PCI-capable facility is essential.
Takeaway: Quick recognition, early ECG, and timely intervention save lives in ACS!