Approach to chest pain

Post on 24-Dec-2014

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description

A practical approach to a common problem

Transcript of Approach to chest pain

Approach to chest pain

Do not panic

Pain

Subjective symptom

Pain sensitive structures Skin Breast Muscles Bones, joints Parietal pleura Myocardium Pericardium Esophagus Aorta- adventitia Nerve roots

Common causes Cardiac- CAD (angina/MI), pericarditis Vascular- aortic dissection, PE Pulmonary- pleuritis, pneumothorax GI- esophageal reflux/spasm/rupture Skeletal- costochondritis, arthritis Nervous- radicular pain, H. zoster

Tumors, abscesses, muscle cramps etc.

How to go?

Serious or catastrophic causes Cardiac ischemia Pericarditis Aortic dissection Pulmonary emboli Esophageal rupture

Back to basics

History & examination

Myocardial ischemia Pain- described as

heaviness/pressure/squeezing/tightness Onset/worsening with exertion/meals Location- substernal/retrosternal Radiation to arms/jaw/shoulder/back Duration- <20 mins. or >20 mins. Relieved with rest, S/L NTG, morphine Associated with nausea/sweating/sense of doom h/o DM, HT, smoking Family history of CAD

Other causes Pericarditis- ant. chest/back, pleuritic,

worse when supine and relieved by sitting upright & leaning forward

Aortic dissection- abrupt onset, rapidly worsens, retrosternal, radiates to back, lasts hours, no relief with analgesics

GI causes- UGI symptoms Costochondritis- elicitable pain

Relevant examination

Vitals- equal pulses, BP, tachypnea Local tenderness or skin lesion LNE (tumor) Crepitations, pleural rub S3/S4, murmur Upper abdominal examination

Relevant investigation

ECG, trop T stress tests (TMT/ECHO)

Chest X-ray D-dimer CT scan chest

Other X-rays- spine, shoulder

Treatment of pain Angina- NTG MI- morphine Pericarditis/PE- NSAIDs Aortic dissection/esophegeal rupture-

Surgery Esophageal reflux- PPI/H2RB Zoster- amitriptyline, carbamazepine,

pregabalin, gabapentin Bone/joint/muscle pain- NSAIDs

Palpitation

Unpleasant awareness offorceful, rapid, irregular

heart beat

Causes Cardiac Sinus bradycardia Any tachycardia PVC/PAC Sick sinus syndrome Advanced AV block Aortic regurgitation

Non-cardiac Fever Anemia Thyrotoxicosis Pheochromocytoma Drugs Alcohol, CocaineAnxiety/Panic

disorder

Evaluation History Onset/offset, frequency, rate, rhythm Aggravating/relieving factors, associated symptoms h/o cardiac disease Examination Pulse- rate, rhythm Pallor, e/o hyperthyroidism Cardiac examination Investigation ECG, ECHO, Holter, Hb., TSH Treatment- of underlying etiology