Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (128 page)

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Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

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Imaging
  • CXR:
    • Usually normal
    • May show cardiomegaly
    • May show pulmonary edema
    • May identify other etiologies of chest pain, such as pneumonia or widened mediastinum of aortic dissection.
  • Rest echocardiography:
    • May identify ACS or AMI based on wall motion abnormalities; also can detect pump failure and valvular abnormalities.
    • Rest echo has a sensitivity of 70% and specificity of 87% for ACS.
    • Rest echo has a sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 66% for AMI.
  • Technetium 99m sestamibi:
    • Radioactive IV dye taken up by myocardium, and detected by single photon emission CT (SPECT) imaging. (Also known as myocardial perfusion imaging.)
    • Can be imaged at rest to detect low- or no-flow areas of myocardium; can also be imaged after exercise or pharmacologic stress.
    • Per 2009 AHA/ACC guidelines, reserve for intermediate- to high-risk patients.
    • Has a sensitivity of 81% and specificity of 73% for ACS.
    • Has a sensitivity of 92% and specificity of 67% for AMI.
  • CT coronary angiography (CTCA):
    • Imaging to evaluate degree of coronary artery stenosis and calcium deposits
    • Negative predictive value between 97% and 100%, accuracy comparable to stress testing
    • Recent NEJM article suggests CTCA decreases ED length of stay but leads to further downstream testing, radiation exposure, and no decrease in cost of care.
  • Exercise stress testing (ETT):
    • May help establish diagnosis of angina, provide prognostic information.
    • 1-mm depression of the ST-segment in 3 consecutive beats and 2 consecutive leads is characteristic of cardiac ischemia.
    • Early positive (within 3 min) stress tests are worrisome for unstable angina.
    • 6 min of exercise using a standard Bruce protocol suggests an excellent prognosis.
    • Exercise stress testing with EKG alone has a sensitivity of 68% and specificity of 77%.
    • Exercise stress testing with echo has a sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 77%.
    • Exercise stress testing with technetium
      99m
      sestamibi has a sensitivity of 87% and specificity of 64%.
  • Cardiac catheterization:
    • Considered the gold standard for evaluating coronary arteries.
    • A history of a recent negative catheterization does not fully exclude AMI, i.e., in cases of vasospasm or cocaine use.
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

EKG, cardiac enzymes, echo, stress testing

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

See ACS chapters.

TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Cardiac monitoring
  • Out-of-hospital EKG:
    • Alone has a sensitivity of 76% and specificity of 88% for ACS.
    • Alone has a sensitivity of 68% and specificity of 97% for AMI.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Cardiac monitoring
  • Oxygen saturation
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • See “Acute Coronary Syndrome: Stable Angina”; “Acute Coronary Syndrome: Unstable Angina”; and “Acute Coronary Syndrome: MI” for more detail.
  • Guidelines for cardiac testing
  • History suggestive of ACS:
    • Obtain ECG and 1st troponin (or other cardiac biomarkers).
  • ECG or 1st troponin abnormal:
    • Admit; consider cardiology consult.
  • Ongoing chest pain or pressure:
    • Obtain sestamibi or echo.
    • Consider serial EKGs
  • Sestamibi, serial EKG or echo abnormal:
    • Admit or cardiology consult.
  • Second troponin (or other cardiac biomarkers) abnormal:
    • Admit; consider cardiology consult.
  • Ancillary testing:
    • For low- to moderate-risk patients: standard exercise testing (ETT).
      • If low-risk patient with good follow-up, ACC/AHA guidelines allow for outpatient stress testing within 72 hr.
      • Per 2007 AHA/ACC guidelines CTCA “reasonable alternative” to stress testing.
    • For abnormal or uninterpretable EKG: Stress echo or sestamibi.
    • For patient unable to exert self: Pharmacologic ETT (i.e., dobutamine stress or dipyridamole sestamibi).
    • Ancillary testing abnormal:
      • Cardiology consult or admit.
MEDICATION

Patient should not be started on new antianginal medication before stress testing in the ED.

FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • History suggestive of cardiac etiology for chest pain and ED observation for serial testing unavailable
  • Abnormal or changed EKG and ED observation unavailable
  • Positive cardiac biomarkers
  • Positive rest imaging
  • If the diagnosis is unclear, admission to the hospital or an ED observation unit may be useful for serial cardiac biomarkers, EKGs, and further ancillary testing.
  • Early positive stress test:
    • If the patient has a positive stress test, the decision for admission should be made in consultation with the primary care physician or cardiologist.
Discharge Criteria

Patients who meet the following criteria are safe to discharge:

  • History not suggestive of cardiac etiology for chest pain
  • Normal ECG
  • Normal cardiac testing
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Abnormal stress test will require close follow-up with cardiology or PCP.
  • Undifferentiated CP should have ED stress testing unless clear follow-up is available.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Normal EKG or enzymes do not rule out CAD.
  • Repeat EKG or additional leads improve sensitivity in detecting AMI.
  • Most ED patients with undifferentiated chest pain will need some form of additional testing.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging Writing Group. Criteria for Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging. ACCF/ASNC/ACR/AHA/ASE/SCCT/SCMR/SNM 2009 Appropriate Use Criteria for Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging. Joint guideline of ACC/AHA.
  • 2013 ACCF/AHA Guideline for Management of ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction.
    J Am Coll Cardiol.
    2012.
  • Hoffman U, Truong QA, Schoenfeld DA, et al. Coronary CT angiography versus standard evaluation in acute chest pain.
    N Engl J Med
    . 2012; 367:299–308.
  • Yiadom MY. Acute coronary syndrome clinical presentations and diagnostic approaches in the emergency department.
    Emerg Med Clin North Am
    . 2011;29:689–697.
CODES
ICD9
  • 89.59 Other nonoperative cardiac and vascular measurements
  • 411.1 Intermediate coronary syndrome
  • 413.9 Other and unspecified angina pectoris
ICD10
  • I20.9 Angina pectoris, unspecified
  • I24.9 Acute ischemic heart disease, unspecified
CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION COMPLICATIONS
Jarrod Mosier

Samuel M. Keim
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Cardiac transplant recipients are a unique population with increased risk for cardiac ischemia, heart failure, as well as general risks as an immunocompromised host.
  • 1,900–2,300 cardiac transplants per yr in US
  • 1-yr survival 85–90%; 5-yr survival ∼75%
  • Typical immunosuppressive therapy to control rejection is a “triple-drug” regimen often including steroids.
  • Frequent biopsies are used initially to evaluate rejection; echocardiography often used in children.
  • Complications occur most commonly in the 1st 6 wk after cardiac transplantation
Geriatric Considerations
  • The proportion of elderly patients on the transplant list, and receiving transplants are increasing.
  • Due to changes in immune system with age, elderly transplant recipients are at increased risk of life-threatening infections, and acute rejection.
Pregnancy Considerations
  • Pregnancy after cardiac transplant is becoming more common. Between 1988 and 2010, 63 women received either heart or heart–lung transplants. They have reported 108 pregnancies, all progressing to live births.
  • Most common complications include hypertension, pre-eclampsia, and rejection.
  • Physiologic changes that occur with pregnancy do not relate to increased rate of heart failure in transplant patients.
  • Special attention should be paid to these patients regarding rejection and infection given their immunosuppression.
ETIOLOGY
  • Rejection
    • Hyperacute rejection
      • Occurs within minutes of transplantation
      • Rare, due to ABO or other graft/host major incompatibility
      • Aggressive and immediately fatal to graft
    • Acute rejection
      • Lymphocyte infiltration and myocyte destruction
      • Most common in 1st 6 wk
      • May occur at any time
      • 75% prevalence
    • Chronic rejection
      • Fibrosis and graft vascular disease
      • Long-term complication
      • Incompletely understood etiology
      • No effective therapy
  • Cardiac allograft vasculopathy
    • Analogous to accelerated coronary artery disease in native hearts
    • Limits long-term survival, leading cause of mortality after 1 yr
  • Immune-mediated atherosclerosis
    • Form of chronic rejection
  • Infections
    • 1st mo
      • Bacterial infections are the most common cause of mortality during this high-risk time period
      • Pneumonia (Pseudomonas, Legionella, other gram-negative organisms)
      • Mediastinitis
      • Wound infection
      • UTI
    • 1st yr
      • Opportunistic and conventional infections
      • Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
      • Herpes simplex virus (HSV)
      • Legionella
      • Fungal infections
      • Pneumocystis carinii
  • Medication toxicity
    • Cyclosporine, Neoral (2nd-generation cyclosporine), tacrolimus:
      • Nephrotoxicity (30% incidence)
      • Hepatotoxicity
      • Neurotoxicity
      • Hyperlipidemia, diabetogenic
    • Azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil:
      • Bone marrow suppression
      • Leukopenia
    • Sirolimus:
      • Hyperlipidemia
      • Wound healing
    • Steroids
      • Osteoporosis
      • Cushing disease
  • Neoplasms
    • Secondary to immunosuppression
    • 10–100 times more common vs. general population
    • Skin and lip cancer
    • Lymphomas
    • Kaposi's sarcoma
    • Solid organ neoplasms

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