Acute Coronary Syndrome
(ACS)
Study
Tags Cardiovascular
Ayush Tamang, NAIHSCOM; Last updated: 8/24/2020
Table of Contents
Introduction
Etiology
Pathophysiology
Clinical Features
Diagnostics
Management
Prevention
Prognosis
References
Introduction
Acute coronary syndrome ACS refers to acute myocardial ischemia
and/or infarction due to partial or complete occlusion of a coronary artery
Myocardial Infarction MI: myocardial cell death (necrosis) caused by
prolonged ischemia
Overview
3 clinical entities grouped under ACS unstable angina pectoris (UA),
non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), and ST
segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI)
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There are 32.4 million myocardial infarctions and strokes
worldwide every year. WHO
Incidence: ∼ 1.5 million cases of myocardial infarction per year in
the US; ♂ > ♀ 31
Etiology
Risk Factors: (refer Coronary Heart Disease CHD)
Increasing age; Male gender; Personal history of angina and/or known
coronary artery disease
Family history of CAD; Diabetes mellitus; Systolic hypertension;
Tobacco use; Hyperlipidemia
Etiology
Most common cause: coronary artery atherosclerosis
Less common:
Coronary artery dissection
Coronary artery vasospasm (e.g., Prinzmetal angina, cocaine use)
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
Myocarditis
Thrombophilia (e.g., polycythemia vera)
Coronary artery embolism (e.g., due to prosthetic heart valve, atrial
fibrillation)
Vasculitis (e.g., polyarteritis nodosa, Kawasaki syndrome)
Myocardial oxygen supply-demand mismatch
Hypotension
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Severe anemia
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Severe aortic stenosis
Pathophysiology
ACS is most commonly due to unstable plaque formation and subsequent
rupture
Plaque formation & rupture (refer CHD, atherosclerosis)
Stable atherosclerotic plaque: manifests as stable angina (symptomatic
during exertion)
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Unstable plaques are lipid-rich and covered by thin fibrous caps →
high risk of rupture
Inflammatory cells in the plaque (e.g., macrophages) secrete matrix
metalloproteinases → breakdown of extracellular matrix → weakening
of the fibrous cap → minor stress → rupture of the fibrous cap →
exposure of highly thrombogenic lipid core → thrombus formation →
coronary artery occlusion
Coronary artery occlusion
Partial coronary artery occlusion
Decreased myocardial blood flow → supply-demand mismatch →
myocardial ischemia
Usually affects the inner layer of the myocardium (subendocardial
infarction)
Typically manifests clinically as unstable angina and/or NSTEMI
Complete coronary artery occlusion
Impaired myocardial blood flow → sudden death of myocardial
cells (if no reperfusion occurs)
Usually affects the full thickness of the myocardium (transmural
infarction)
Typically manifests clinically as STEMI
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Ischemia/Reperfusion injury
Reperfusion may occur spontaneously or, most commonly, after
percutaneous coronary intervention PCI or thrombolytic (fibrinolytic)
therapy
Reperfusion may limit the size of the infarction by restoring blood
flow (and thus oxygen supply) to previously ischemic tissue.
Reperfusion may have deleterious effects if ischemic myocardial
cells that were not irreversibly injured are damaged by reperfusion
(called reperfusion injury). Up to 50% of infarction size may be
secondary to reperfusion injury.
Effects of reperfusing ischemic tissue depend on when reperfusion
occurs.
If reperfusion occurs 3 hours after cessation of blood flow,
there is a greater chance of salvaging ischemic but not
irreversibly damaged tissue.
Salvaged tissue is biochemically altered, which may
interfere with normal function for several days or longer
(called myocardial stunning) and predispose tissue to
reperfusion dysrhythmias.
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Reperfusion of previously irreversibly damaged cells results
in their death and the formation of contraction bands due
to the entry of Ca2 into the cytosol, causing
hypercontraction of the myocytes Fig. 115; Link 1119.
If reperfusion occurs 3 hours, there is a much greater chance
that previously ischemic cells are irreversibly damaged (called
reperfusion injury). Overall size of the infarction will increase.
Mechanism of irreversible myocardial injury
Superoxide free radicals (FRs) are locally produced by xanthine
oxidase and irreversibly damage myocytes
Acute inflammation occurs with an infiltration of tissue by
neutrophils
Neutrophils occlude capillary lumens, which decreases blood
flow to the ischemic tissue.
Neutrophils release proteolytic enzymes and increase the
production of reactive O2 species
Other factors that contribute to irreversible myocardial injury
include apoptosis as well as platelet and complement system
activation
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Histopathology
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Complications
Clinical Features
Classical Presentation
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Acute retrosternal chest pain
Typically described as dull, squeezing pressure and/or tightness
Commonly radiates to left chest, arm, shoulder, neck, jaw, and/or
epigastrium
Precipitated by exertion or stress
The peak time of occurrence is usually in the morning 811 a.m.)
More common in inferior wall infarction
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Epigastric pain (maybe mistaken for reflux esophagitis)
Bradycardia (inferior wall infarction mostly due to occlusion to RCA,
which also supplies the conduction system of the heart → arrhythmia)
Clinical triad in right ventricular infarction: Hypotension, elevated
jugular venous pressure, clear lung fields
Atypical presentation: minimal to no chest pain
more likely in elderly, diabetic individuals, and women
Autonomic symptoms (e.g., nausea, diaphoresis) are often the chief
complaint.
In patients with diabetes, chest pain may be completely absent (e.g.,
silent MI due to polyneuropathy
STEMI classically manifests acutely with more severe symptoms, while
unstable angina/NSTEMI has a continuous course with milder symptoms.
Diagnostics
EKG should be performed immediately once ACS is suspected, followed by
measurement of cardiac biomarkers. Further diagnostic workup (e.g.,
echocardiography) depends on the results of initial evaluation and further
risk stratification (e.g., GRACE score, TIMI score)
EKG (refer Basics of EKG )
12-lead ECG is the best initial test if ACS is suspected
Dynamic changes require serial ECG evaluation
Compare to prior ECGs (if available)
ECG changes in STEMI
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Acute stage: myocardial damage ongoing
Hyperacute T waves ("peaked T wave")
ST elevations in two contiguous leads with reciprocal ST
depressions
Intermediate stage: myocardial necrosis present
Absence of R wave
T-wave inversions
Pathological Q waves
Chronic stage: permanent scarring
Persistent, broad, and deep Q waves
Often incomplete recovery of R waves
Permanent T wave inversion is possible
The sequence of EKG changes over several hours to days:
hyperacute T wave → ST elevation → pathological Q wave → T
wave inversion → ST normalization → T-wave normalization
An acute LBBB + symptoms of ACS = STEMI because ST elevations
cannot be adequately assessed in the setting of an LBBB.
ECG changes in NSTEMI/unstable angina
No ST elevations present
Nonspecific changes may be present.
ST depression
Inverted T wave
Loss of R wave
EKG localization of MI
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Cardiac Biomarkers
Creatine kinase (CKMB) and troponins T (Tn-T) and I (Tn-I) are the
first to rise, followed by aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and then
lactate (hydroxybutyrate) dehydrogenase (LDH).
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Additional Lab findings
Elevated inflammatory markers: ↑ WBC, CRP
Elevated BNP especially in heart failure
Elevated LDH
Elevated AST SGOT
Coronary Angiography
Best test for definitive diagnosis of acute coronary occlusion
Can be used for concurrent intervention (e.g., PCI with stent
placement)
Can identify site and degree of vessel occlusion
Indications include: Acute STEMI, Other high-risk ACS (see TIMI score
below), See also cardiac catheterization
The most commonly occluded coronary arteries (descending order):
left anterior descending artery, right coronary artery, circumflex artery.
Additional studies
Transthoracic echocardiogram
Identification of any wall motion abnormalities and to assess LV
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function
Important for risk assessment: In STEMI, the best predictor of survival
is LVEF.
Evaluation for complications: aneurysms, mitral valve regurgitation,
pericardial effusion, free wall rupture
Cardiac CT
May be considered as an alternative to invasive coronary angiography
in patients with an intermediate risk of ACS (based on TIMI score)
Allows for noninvasive visualization of the coronary arteries
Contraindication: arrhythmias, tachycardia
Risk Stratification
Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction TIMI score
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The GRACE score Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events)
Differential Diagnosis
also refer DDx of chest pain
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DDx of increased troponin
Cardiac causes
Myocarditis
Decompensated congestive heart failure
Pulmonary embolism
Cardiac arrhythmia, tachycardia
Cardiac trauma
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
Noncardiac causes
Renal failure
Stroke
Critical illness (e.g., sepsis)
DDx of ST-elevations on ECG
Early repolarization
LBBB
Brugada syndrome
Myocarditis
Pericarditis
Pulmonary embolism
Hyperkalemia
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Tricyclic antidepressant use
Poor ECG lead placement
Management
Summary
All patients
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Monitoring
Serial 12-lead ECG
Continuous cardiac monitoring
Serial serum troponin measurement
Pharmacologic therapy
Sublingual or intravenous nitrate (nitroglycerin or ISDN
For symptomatic relief of chest pain
Does not improve prognosis
Contraindications: inferior wall infarct (due to risk for
hypotension), hypotension, and/or PDE 5 inhibitor (e.g.,
sildenafil) taken within last 24 hours
Morphine IV or SC 35 mg)
Only if the patient has severe, persistent chest pain or severe
anxiety related to the myocardial event
Administer with caution due to increased risk of complications
(e.g., hypotension, respiratory depression) and adverse events
Beta blocker
Recommended within the first 24 hours of admission
Avoid in patients with hypotension, features of heart failure,
and/or risk of cardiogenic shock (e.g., large LV infarct, low
ejection fraction).
Statins: early initiation of high-intensity statin (such as atorvastatin
80 mg) regardless of baseline cholesterol, LDL, and HDL levels
Loop diuretic (e.g., furosemide) if the patient has flash pulmonary
edema or features of heart failure
Supportive care
Intravenous fluids (e.g., normal saline): in patients with an inferior
MI that causes RV dysfunction
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Oxygen: only in case of cyanosis, severe dyspnea, or SpO2 < 90%
(< 95% in STEMI
Primary interventions of MI treatment include “MONA”: Morphine,
Oxygen, Nitroglycerin, and Aspirin. But remember: Morphine, oxygen,
and nitroglycerine are not necessarily indicated for every patient (see
indications above).
STEMI
Immediate revascularization: Revascularization is the most important
step in the management of acute STEMI and initiation of further therapies
(e.g., DAPT, anticoagulation) should not delay this step in management)
Emergent coronary angiography: with percutaneous coronary
intervention (PCI)
Preferred method of revascularization
Balloon dilatation with stent implantation (see cardiac
catheterization)
Ideally, door-to-PCI time should be < 90 minutes. It should not
exceed 120 minutes.
Thrombolytic therapy: tPA, reteplase, or streptokinase
Indications:
If PCI cannot be performed < 120 minutes after onset of
STEMI
If PCI was unsuccessful
No contraindications to thrombolysis
Contraindications:
Any prior intracranial bleeding
Recent large GI bleeding
Recent major trauma, head injury, and/or surgery
Ischemic stroke within the past 3 months
Hypertension (> 180/110 mm Hg)
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Known coagulopathy
Timing
Symptom onset was within the past 312 hours
Should be administered within < 30 minutes of patient
arrival to the hospital
Contraindicated if > 24 hours after symptom onset
PCI should be performed even if lysis is successful
Coronary artery bypass grafting
not routinely recommended for acute STEMI
Indications
If PCI is unsuccessful
If coronary anatomy is not amenable to PCI
If STEMI occurs at the time of surgical repair of a
mechanical defect
Medical therapy
Dual antiplatelet therapy: start as soon as possible
Aspirin loading dose 162 mg–325 mg
PLUS ADP receptor inhibitor: prasugrel, ticagrelor, or
clopidogrel
Dual antiplatelet therapy should be continued for at least 12
months after PCI with DES.
GP IIb/IIIa receptor antagonist (e.g., eptifibatide or tirofiban):
should be considered in precatheterization setting
Anticoagulation
Heparin or bivalirudin recommended
Continue until PCI is performed or for 48 hours after a
fibrinolytic is given.
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"Time is muscle": Revascularization should occur as soon as possible in
patients with STEMI!
Unstable angina/NSTEMI
Dual antiplatelet therapy: start as soon as possible
Aspirin loading dose
Plus ADP receptor inhibitor: clopidogrel or ticagrelor
Dual antiplatelet therapy should be continued for at least 12
months if PCI with DES was performed.
Anticoagulation
Heparin or enoxaparin
Continue for the duration of hospitalization or until PCI is
performed.
Immediate vs. delayed revascularization
The indication for and timing of revascularization depends on the
mortality risk (e.g., TIMI score).
In patients with therapy-resistant chest pain, a TIMI score ≥ 3, ↑
troponin, and/or ST changes > 1 mm
Consider the addition of a GPIIb/ IIIa inhibitor (e.g., tirofiban or
eptifibatide)
Plan for revascularization within 72 hours (e.g., angiography
with PCI or CABG
Fibrinolytic treatment is not recommended in patients with unstable
angina or NSTEMI.
For Acute Management Checklist for ACS, refer AHA guidelines
MI in old age
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Prevention
Primary prevention
Treatment/avoidance of modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis
(e.g., smoking cessation, treatment of hypertension, etc.)
Healthy, plant-based diet
Regular physical activity and exercise
Low-dose aspirin is beneficial for certain high-risk groups. The choice
to prescribe it should be made on an individual basis.
Secondary prevention
Lifestyle modification and treatment of modifiable risk factors (see
“Primary prevention” above and treatment of diseases caused by
atherosclerosis)
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Platelet-aggregation inhibitors
Lifelong low-dose aspirin 75100 mg/day
DAPT Dual Antiplatelet therapy) with the addition of an ADP receptor
inhibitor (e.g., prasugrel, ticagrelor, or clopidogrel) is recommended for
12 months for all patients who have undergone PCI.
Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonists (e.g., abciximab) may be considered
but are not used routinely.
Beta blockers: Unless contraindicated, all patients should be started on
a beta blocker, which has been shown to confer a mortality benefit.
Statin: All patients should be started on a high-intensity statin (e.g.,
atorvastatin).
An aldosterone antagonist and ACE inhibitor/ARB are recommended for
all patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy and an LV ejection fraction
< 40% or symptoms of heart failure.
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Prognosis
is related to the extent of residual myocardial ischemia, the degree of
myocardial damage and the presence of ventricular arrhythmias.
In almost one-quarter of all cases of MI, death occurs within a few
minutes without medical care. Half the deaths occur
within 24 hours of the onset of symptoms and about 40% of all affected
patients die within the first month.
Early death is usually due to an arrhythmia and is independent of the
extent of MI. However, late outcomes are determined by
the extent of myocardial damage, and unfavorable features include poor
left ventricular function, AV block and persistent
ventricular arrhythmias.
The prognosis is worse for anterior than for inferior infarcts. Bundle
branch block and high cardiac marker levels both indicate extensive
myocardial damage. Old age, depression and social isolation are also
associated with a higher mortality.
Of those who survive an acute attack, more than 80% live for a further
year, about 75% for 5 years, 50%
for 10 years and 25% for 20 years.
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References
Davidson's Principle and Practice of Medicine 23rd edition Page 493501
First Aid for USMLE Step 1 2020 30th edition
https://www.amboss.com/us/knowledge/Acute_coronary_syndrome
Risk Stratification in ACS
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https://www.healthline.com/health/timi-score
https://www.mdcalc.com/grace-acs-risk-mortality-calculator
2013 ACCF/AHA Guideline for the Management of STElevation Myocardial
Infarction: Executive Summary
2014 AHA/ACC Guideline for the Management of Patients With Non–ST
Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes
Goljan's Rapid Review of Pathology 5th edition 2019, Pg 483
Robbins & Cotran's Pathological Basis of Diseases 9th edition 2015, Pg
540
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