Thank you to Dr. Dan Brenner for his great talk this week on
Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS).
A dear mentor and teacher of mine who knows more than almost
anyone I know said in the hallway after GR, “You know, you think you know everything there is to know about a topic,
and then you go to Grand Rounds. . .and I learn something new every time!”
It’s true.
Here’s what I learned this week:
·
Family docs are the masters of prevention. (I
already knew that!)
o Diet
and exercise modifications can reduce CAD risk up to 50%. Wow!
o Use
the ASVD
calculator to guide primary
prevention recommendations (not applicable to those with known CAD)
§ Patients
with ASCVD 10 year risk >7.5% OR with Diabetes should be on a statin
AND aspirin
§ Coronary
calcium score may also help guide decisions about ASA for primary prevention
·
Stable Coronary Artery Disease should be managed
medically
o Ischemia
Trial of >5000 patients with stable
CAD (excluded left main disease) raises questions about medical management vs.
invasive treatment (PCI) in Stable CAD
§ Their
bottom line: medical management trumps PCI, BUT I will note that Dr. Brenner
took issue with some of their conclusions
·
Optimal medical therapy is CRITICAL in the
treatment of stable disease, AND revascularization
may still be indicated in patients to prevent long-term risk of MI and improve
symptoms (i.e. angina)
§ Shared
decision-making should be employed (my favorite topic!!)
·
To review definitions in ACS
o Unstable
angina: chest pain, no EKG changes, no cardiac enzyme elevation
o NSTE-ACS:
chest pain, +/- EKG changes (e.g. non-specific, ST depressions, T wave
inversions, etc), +cardiac enzyme elevation
o STEMI:
chest pain, ST elevation EKG changes, +/- cardiac enzyme elevation
·
The best thing a patient can do if they are
having an MI is call 911. The ambulance can expedite an EKG and mobilize
cardiology teams at the hospital because “time is myocardium”
o Goal
EMS to drug (heparin) <30 minutes
o Goal
EMS to balloon <90 minutes
o Symptom
onset to reperfusion <120 minutes
·
Pharmacotherapy: beta blocker (slow heart rate),
nitrates, ACE-I, statin, dual antiplatelet (ASA+ ticagrelor, ASA+clopidogrel),
o Goal:
optimize balance of myocardial supply/demand
·
Percutaneous intervention (PCI)
o Goal:
open the artery, optimize balance of myocardial supply/demand
o Radial
approach is better than femoral (decreased risk bleeding complications)
o After
a drug eluting stent (DES) is placed, dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) should
be continued for at least a year (call the cardiologist if you have questions).
o Complications
of PCI occur of 1-2% of patients: bleeding, contrast-induced neophropathy,
Acute CVA/embolism, dissection/perforation, MI, emergent CT surgery, death
·
ACS secondary prevention (that is us again!)
o Smoking
cessation
o Cardiac
rehab (supervised exercise program)
o Diet
o Medical
therapy: ASA +/- p2y12 inhibitor (ticagrelor, clopidogrel), statin, ACE-I
(improved survival), aldosterone antagonist (reduced HF and sudden cardiac
death), beta blockers (reduced HF, infarct size, arrhythmia, sudden cardiac
death)