Title: Evaluation of Chest Pain
1Evaluation of Chest Pain
- Edward Catherwood, MD, MS
2Chest Pain History
- P pattern (temporal sequence)
- A associated features
- SOB, N/V, diaphoresis
- fever, cough, chills
- abdominal pain
- I initiation and improvement
- N nature (quality)
3Chest Pain Physical Exam
- Vital signs and general appearance
- Carotids and JVP
- Lungs
- Cardiac exam
- Thoracic cage
- Abdominal exam
- Periphery (pulses)
- Skin
4Chest Pain Laboratory
- Electrocardiogram
- Chest x-ray
- Blood studies
- CBC
- Cardiac enzymes
- Liver function
- Amylase, lipase
- Imaging Ultrasound, CT, nuclear
5Chest Pain Location
Myocardial ischemia Pericarditis Pleurisy,
Sub-diap abscess
Myocardial ischemia Pericarditis Aortic
dissection Mediastinal lesion Pulmonary
embolism Esophageal spasm
Myocardial ischemia Cervical spine Thoracic outlet
Cholecystitis Hepatic distension Peptic
disease Pancreatitis Myocardial ischemia
Pulmonary embolism Pneumonia Splenic
infarction Subdiap. abscess
6Clinical Spectrum of Acute Coronary Syndromes
Stable angina
Unstable angina
Non-STE MI
STE MI
None
Positive
Positive
ST-segment elevation
ST-segment depression and/or T-wave inversion
ST-segment depression and/or T-wave
inversion
ECG early
ECG late
No Q
No Q
Q develops
Antman EM. In Braunwald E, ed. Heart Disease A
Textbook in Cardiovascular Medicine, 5th ed.
Philadelphia, Pa WB Saunders 1997.
7ACS Clinical Presentation
- Substernal chest pain or pressure (gt20-30 min)
- Localization or radiation to arms, back, throat,
jaw - Accompanying features
- Dyspnea
- Nausea/vomiting
- Diaphoresis
- Weakness
- Atypical syncope, CVA, DKA
8ECG Findings in ACS
9ECG Findings in ACS
10 ACC/AHA Guidelines
PTCA, percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty CABG, coronary artery bypass graft
ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme.Adapted from
Ryan TJ, et al. ACC/AHA 1999 Update. Available
at http//www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines and
http//www.americanheart.org. Accessed February
2000.
11Symptoms Suggestive of ACS
Definite ACS
Possible ACS
() ECG Normal biomarkers
ST ?
No ST ?
Reperfuse
ST-T ?s, chest pain, ? markers
Observe repeat ECG, markers at 4-8 hrs
No recurrent pain () follow-up studies
Recurrent pain () follow-up studies
Stress test ? LV function if ischemia
() test
Consider Early Invasive Strategy
() test outpt follow-up
12ECG Findings in ACS
13ECG Findings in ACS
14 Cardiac Enzymes
1000
100
10
Relative Marker Increase
Upper Reference Interval
1
0
Hours After Chest Pain Onset
Antman EM. In Braunwald E, ed. Heart Disease A
Textbook in Cardiovascular Medicine, 5th ed.
Philadelphia, Pa WB Saunders 1997.
15Secondary Causes of ACS
- Tachyarrhythmias
- Severe anemia
- Medication withdrawal
- Hyperthyroidism
- Sepsis or other toxic state
- Multisystem organ failure
16Post-op Chest Pain and SOB
- 70 yo man 10 days following CABG
- Developed acute dyspnea and right-sided chest
pain on awakening - Exam revealed tachypnea and hypoxemia
17Perfusion Lung Scan
18Acute Upper Back Pain
- 49 yo man with long standing HCVD
- Sudden mid back and interscapular pain
- Associated with nausea and sweats
- Unrelieved by change of position
- Some radiation toward the left chest
19(No Transcript)
20Aortic Dissection
21Wrestler with Chest Pain
- 18 yo high school wrestler develops right-sided
chest pain while pinning his opponent. - Physical exam reveal decreased breath sounds on
right
22Alcoholic with Chest Pain and Cough
- 45 yo alcoholic man with fever, chills and
productive cough over two days
23Smoker with Chest Pain
- 68 yo former smoker with right shoulder and upper
substernal pain - History reveals 12 pound weight loss
24Final Caveats
- Nitro response is not diagnostic
- Qualifiers for sharp pain
- Post-prandial pain may be ischemic
- Discomfort thresholds vary
- Patient histrionics may influence you
- Atypical is typical of something
- Value of careful history and physical
- Surveillance is key