Emed - Approach To Chest Pain (Doc Vito)

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 53

Approach to chest pain diagnosis

By
RODERICK T. VITO, M.D.
Overview
• Five percent of total ED visits in a year
• Symptom of several life threatening diseases
• Dissociation between intensity of S/Sx and
seriousness of underlying pathology
• Accurate diagnosis is still a challenge
• Involves the somatic and visceral afferent
fibers
Somatic vs. Visceral
• Somatic pain : dermis and parietal pleura
• Visceral pain : esophagus, heart, blood vessels,
visceral pleura

• Somatic pain : easily described, precisely located,


sharp sensation
• Visceral pain : difficult to describe, poorly localized,
discomfort, heaviness, aching
• ACUTE CHEST PAIN

– Recent onset, <24 hours


– Located anterior thorax
– Noxious , uncomfortable sensation
– Distressed patient
Initial approach to chest pain
• Focused in the Life Threatening diseases
• ABC life support
• Secondary Survey :
– History taking: quality , location, radiation,
severity, time, provoking factors, relieving factors,
associated symptoms
– Risk factors
– Physical examination
• Three categories of chest pain
1. Chest wall pain
2. Pleuritc or respiratory chest pain
3. Visceral chest pain
Chest wall pain
• Somatic pain
• Sharp quality, precisely localized
• Reproducible by direct palpation and or chest
wall movement during stretching or twisting
Chest wall pain
Costosternal Syndrome
Costochondritis
Fibromyalgia
Slipping rib syndrome
Radicular symptoms
Intercostal nerve syndromes
Pleuritic pain
• Somatic pain
• Sharp quality
• Worsened by coughing or breathing
Pleuritic pain
Pulmonary embolism
Pneumonia
Pneumothorax
Pericarditis
pleurisy
Visceral chest pain
• Poorly localized
• Aching and heaviness
visceral chest pain
• Typical exertional angina
• Atypical angina
• Unstable angina
• AMI
• Aortic dissection
• Pericarditis
• Esophageal reflux
• Aortic dissection
• Esophageal rupture
• Mitral valve prolapse
• In chest pain diagnosis there is no one fact or
observation make the diagnosis
• Challenge is to select the useful features that
guide further assessment, management and
disposition
• Risk factors
• Age
• Review of medical records
• Therapeutic trials
Risk factors
• CAD: cigarette smoking, HPN, DM, high
cholesterol, family history
• Aortic dissection : middle age, male, HPN,
marfan syndrome
• Pulmonary embolism: hypercoagulable
diasthesis, malignancy, recent immobilization
or surgery
• Age: below 30 years rare to have coronary
artery disease
• Acute cocaine use prone to have AMI
• Chronic cocaine : atherosclerosis, severe
coronary artery disease
Youth or absence of risk factors does not
completely eliminate any potentially serious
cause of acute chest pain
Review medical records
• Compare tracing or finding of previous cardiac
studies: EKG, stress testings, catheterization
( coronary angiography)
• Esophageal studies: endoscopy, barium
swallowing studies
• GIT: UTZ, CT scan
• Pulmonary : spirometry
Therapeutic trials
• Gastrointestinal cocktail: antacids,
antispasmodics and local anesthetic:
esophageal reflux
• Nitroglycerin: myocardial ischemia
• NSAID: chest wall pain
Ischemic equivalents
• Atypical presentations
• Dyspnea at rest, lightheadedness, jaw or
shoulder pain, body weakness, acute change
in mental status, diaphoresis
• Epigastric pain or upper abdominal discomfort
• Patients with sensory impairment : DM,
advanced age, psychiatric patients
• Women, non-white population
Differential Diagnosis
• Myocardial ischemia
– Imbalance in myocardial blood supply and
oxygen requirements

• In the ER :
– Acute coronary syndrome: unstable angina
pectoris, STEMI and non-STEMI
– Stable Angina : episodic pain, less than 10 min,
exertional, relieved by rest and or NTG
• Unstable Angina: new onset ( less than 1-2
months)
– More frequent, easily provoked, more severe,
difficult to relieve
– Occur at rest ( more than 20 minutes)
– Associated with dyspnea, diaphoresis, nausea
• Acute Myocardial Infarction ( STEMI or non-
STEMI)
– EKG : ST segment elevation, T wave inversion, new
Left bundle branch block
– Serum Markers : (+) cardiac enzymes :
• Troponin T or I
• Myoglobin
• CPK- MB
Pulmonary Embolism
• Thrombi from the deep vein of the lower extremities
and pelvis would travel to the lungs
• Signs and symptoms will depend on the size of the
thrombi
• Chest pain , dyspnea, syncope, shock, hypoxia
• Pleuritic chest pain
• Tender chest wall during palpation
• Fever, cough, hemptysis
Aortic dissection
• Jet of blood induces an intimal tear
• Blood dissects the media due systolic aortic
pressures among uncontrolled hypertensives
• Risk factors : uncontrolled hypertension, coarctation
of the aorta, bicuspid aortic valves, aortic stenosis,
marfans syndrome, etc.
• Midline substernal chest pain: tearing , ripping and
searing; radiating interscapular area
• Pain is as worst at its onset felt above and below the
diaphragm
pneumothorax
• Due to sudden changes in barometric
pressures: smokers, COPD, pleural bleb
disease
• Sudden, sharp, lancinating pleuritic chest pain
and dyspnea
• Absent lung sounds affected side,
hyperresonance to percussion
• Chest X-ray
Esophageal rupture
• Boerhaave syndrome: rare
• Mackler triad :Substernal sharp chest pain,
vomiting, subcutaneous emphysema
• Spontaneous esophageal rupture
• Increase in intraabdominal pressure
• Esophagus has no serosal layer( contains
elastic fibers and collagen)
Gastrointestinal disorders
• Dyspepsia syndromes
1. gastroesophageal reflux – burning and
gnawing in character lower half of the chest
2. esophageal spasm – sudden,tight or
gripping substernal chest pain precipitated by
consumpation of hot or cold liquids or large
food bolus
Peptic ulcer disease
• Postprandial, dull , boring pain in the
midepigastric area
• Awakened from sleep
• Duodenal ulcer type : relieved after eating
• Gastric ulcer type: aggravated by food
• Differentiated from acute pancreatitis or
biliary tract diseases
Acute pericarditis
• Inflammation of the pericardium following bacterial,
viral or fungal infection
• Non-specific or idiopathic pericarditis
• Trauma : hemopericardium
• Neoplasms: lung and breast
• Dull or sharp precordial pain radiating to the
trapezius, neck and shoulders
• Aggravated by thoracic motion, cough or respiration
• CP maybe relieved by sitting up and leaning
forward
• Auscultation: “friction rub”
• Pericardial effusion is common
Pneumonia
• Acute infection of the lung parenchyma including
alveolar spaces and interstitial tissues
• Lobar, segmental, bronchopneumonia, interstitial
• Pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea, fever, sputum
production
• Common bacteria: strep pneumonia, anaerobic
bacteria, Staph aureus, H. influenza, kleb pneumonia,
mycoplasma pneumoniae, chlamydia pneumoniae
Muskuloskeletal pain
• Localized, sharp pain
• Reproduced by light palpation of a discrete area
• Costochondritis – inflammation of the costal
cartilages and /or their sternal articulations ; sharp
and dull pain increased with respiration
• Differentiated from pulmonary embolism and
myocardial ischemia
Panic Disorders
• Recurrent, unexpected panic attacks
• Palpitation, diaphoresis, tremor , dyspahagia,
choking, chest pain , nausea, dizziness, fear of
losing control or dying, paresthesia, chills
• Diagnosis of exclusion
Ancillary Studies

ECG
Chest x-ray
Serum markers
– CK-MB
– Myoglobin
– Troponin I and T
Empiric Management
• Placed in cardiac monitor
• Oxygen therapy
• IV line initiated
• Vital Signs
• ECG
• Chest x-ray
• MONA ( morphine, oxygen, nitroglycerine and
aspirin)
• Pericardiocenthesis
Thank you.

You might also like