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STABLE ANGINA PECTORIS
STABLE ANGINA PECTORIS
Angina is chest
pain due to poor blood flow through the coronaries.
Ischemia is enough to cause symptoms but no necrosis
Physical exertion is the most common cause of anginal pain
Severely narrowed coronaries may allow enough blood to reach the
myocardium, when O2 demand is low(as in rest).But with exertion myocardial O2 demand increases causing angina.
In Stable angina there
is no history to suggest increase in
severity or frequency of anginal chest pain. And stable anginal attacks are
usually predictable, are of short duration;<5min)
as a rule are relieved
promptly by rest.
“Stable angina” shows stability in frequency and severity of pain,
and is predictable-during or after physical exercise or emotional stress
Patho
physiologically “stable” atherosclerotic plaque of coronary vessel is the
cause.) .
Figure27.2. 1 FIXED CORONARY OBSTRUCTION
IN STABLE ANGINA
Precipitating
factors
Exertion, emotion, exposure
to very hot/cold climate, heavy meals and smoking
CAUSES: of Angina
Pectoris
1. most common
cause -Coronary atheroma
2. Other causes
Aortic valve disease,
Aortitis.
Polyarteritis, connective tissue disorders.
3. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
4. Without any demonstrable lesion –syndrome X
PATHO GENESIS:
fig 27.2.1
A.
Defective
Supply:
Reduced coronary blood flow, increased coronary vascular
resistance.
Lowered O2 carrying capacity -anemia
B. Increased demand:
E.g. increased heart rate, myocardial contractility and wall
stress
(which increase in exercise, HT, LV dilatation)
Coronary
flow reserve normally increases
fourfold in exercise;
In
angina –flow reserve is reduced by structural stenosis or spasm.
Some
patients have variable effort tolerance called phenomenon of Variable threshold angina, because of
dynamic endothelial dysfunction.
CLINICAL
FEATURES OF ANGINA PECTORIS
Diagnosis: History is
most important; Diagnosis is only by
history.
Typical
history-
o
Central chest pain brought on by exertion and relieved by rest
or nitrates.
o
Rest relieves pain in a matter of 5min
o
Pain described as squeezing, pressing /tightness in chest
o
Sometimes like indigestion, sometimes indescribable
o
May be associated with nausea, fatigue, dyspnea, sweating, and
giddiness.
o
Pain radiates ‘like fountain’ from precardium
Most commonly radiates to
left arm /wrist /hand – inner aspect
Less commonly to right arm
/to neck /jaw /tooth/ back /epigastrium.
May occur in any of these
sites without central chest pain
Precipitated by - heavy
meal /, cold weather /walking up hill/carrying heavy
Bags/climbing steep stairs.
(Peripheral vasoconstriction, increased oxygen demand)
o
Breathlessness
sometimes is a prominent feature of angina.
o
Anginal
equivalents: Dyspnea, palpitation and
giddiness, fatigue, severe weakness on walking.
o
Silent
ischemia:
Without any anginal symptoms, ischemia may be silent.
Variants of Angina:
2 main types
Stable angina: vide supra
Unstable angina: Angina at rest and it is accelerated angina
(refer chapter on unstable angina)
Other
variants
Prinzmetal’s angina –
occurs due to occlusive coronary arterial spasm
with; “abnormal over reaction to vaso
constrictive agents”
Occurs at rest typically in
the early morning hours.
Transient ST Elevation on ECG-is hall mark
Complication; in prolonged attacks-vent. Arrhythmia, syncope, MI
Start
–up angina – pain comes on the start of walking but does not
return on continued effort.
Decubitus
angina
– pain when lying flat ;(áin venous return provokes pain)
Nocturnal
angina
- awakened by pain in the night
Key message
in cases of atypical angina
Such patients should be referred for Stress ECG and are often
found to have IHD.
PHYSICAL
EXAMINATION: IN ANGINA PECTORIS
Often
negative.
But physician must not fail to search for:
o
signs of important risk factors: - e.g. nicotine stain,
hypertension, hyperlipedemia (tendon xanthoma, arcus lipidis, thickening of
achilis tendon) diabetes, myxedema
o
Contributory diseases:- obesity,
anemia, thyrotoxicosis, aortic
valve diseases/MVPS
o
Left ventricular dysfunction: cardiomegaly, gallop rhythm, basal
crackles, raised JVP.
o
Generalized arterial disease: - e.g. carotid bruit, peripheral
vascular disease.
DIFFERENTIAL
DIAGNOSIS:
Musculoskeletal
pain:
aggravated by specific movements like
bending, turning, stretching; not by walking.
Background pain persists at rest. In addition chest wall
tenderness may be present.
Pericardial pain: provoked by changes in posture and deep inspiration, sharp.
Oesophageal pain; has burning nature and relieved
by antacids ,PPI
Oesophageal spasm: different type of pain, can’t
easily differentiate from
Variant angina.
INVESTIGATIONS
I. Resting
ECG:
♣Normal mostly; A normal ECG does not exclude angina
♣In some – non specific changes like T wave flattening /inversion
♣May show previous myocardial infarction
♣Definite sign of ischemia are – ST ↓ or ↑ with or without T ↓ - at
the time of symptoms
Remember: ECG does not decide the type of angina
including unstable angina: deciding factor is only the history
II. Exercise ECG.
/Stress test
Used to
confirm or refute a diagnosis of ischemia, to assess severity and diagnose high
risk.
Procedure Patient is made to exercise at increasing level of effort on a
stationary treadmill or bicycle and 12 lead ECG monitoring done.
BP and
general condition also monitored along with.
Signs of
ischemia are –ST segment depression of 1mm or more (planar or down sloping) or
elevation, arrhythmias, fall of BP.
Caution: If severe chest pain or/ fall of BP /arrhythmia/severe
STdepression or elevation develops, resuscitation facilities must be available.
o
False positive results:-in digoxin therapy /, LVH/LBBB/WPW
syndrome.
o
Predictive accuracy of test: less in women.
Principle involved in exercise ECG: When the heart is working hard and beating fast
it needs more blood and O2, Plaque narrowed coronaries cannot supply
enough O2 rich blood in this situation
Other
forms of Stress testing:
Stress test
can be combined with an imaging modality, which helps to visualize the -
ischemic myocardium thus increasing its specificity
Indication1. in those unable to exercise, 2.equivocal stress test results
Predictable
accuracy; higher than in stress test
1. Myocardial perfusion scanning:
Technique:
After intravenous administration trace radioactive isotope like Thallium
201/Tc99,
using a gamma camera, scan of the myocardium
is performed in 2 conditions A)At rest
B) After
exercise. The gamma camera images the distribution of the radioactive material
in the myocardium. If there were to be any differences in the myocardial blood
flow, the
-distribution
of the tracer will be non homogeneous.
In resting image: Ischemic myocardium
appears normal but in stress image
-is under perfused
appearing as a cold spot.
Scarred myocardium which receives no blood flow appears as cold spot on resting and
stress images
Thallium; is analogue of “K”: accumulates in viable perfused
myocardium
o
At a time when enzyme levels have not raised perfusion images can
be abnormal
.
Tests that
can be done in conjunction:
isotope scanning can be done along with
ETT or pharmacological stress like controlled infusion of dobutamine.
echo/radionuclide blood pool scanning: -
done to measure ventricular function
.
2. Pharmacological Stress test: For patients
who are unable to exercise:
Controlled
infusion of Dobutamine is administered. This increases heart rate and
myocardial contractility thus simulating the effects of exercise. Dypiridamole
or adenosine may be used instead of dobutamine.
3. Stress Echocardiogram:
This stress
test is combined with Echo imaging of the heart.
In ischemic
or scarred myocardium it shows wall motion or functional abnormality.
Has same
predictive accuracy as SPECT.In addition it is convenient, relatively cheaper,
and helps in
valvular evaluation also. Physiologically wall motion changes precede ECG
changes.
Results of
this test help in deciding the severity of the coronary stenosis
III.
Non Invasive Investigations:
A) Routine:
X-ray chest
B)
Echocardiogrphy:
Detects regional /global systolic dysfunction,
valvular lesion, HOCM.
C) Electron
Beam Computed Tomography:
Evaluates calcium content in the coronary
arteries. And predicts MI in asymptomatic; sensitive but not specific test; not
recommended as a routine tool for investigation.
D) Multi
slice detector computed tomography; (MDCT):
An
alternative to invasive coronary angiography.
64 slice multi detector computed topography: can be used to rule
out acute coronary syndrome in patients with chest pain; quickly and accurately
excludes the presence of IHD
E) MRI
F) PET scanning
.Lab tests:
Complete hemogram to exclude anemia, Lipid profile to identify
hyperlipedemia, serum creatinine to identify renal impairment, fasting blood
glucose to identify DM, Thyroid function test to exclude thyroid disease if
there is clinical suspicion
What is the
role of above investigations in Angina pectoris?
In difficult cases Tread
mill test, nuclear cardiac studies and Echo will confirm the diagnosis of
angina.
If these tests show gross abnormality patient should undergo
coronary angiography to decide if he needs angioplasty or Bypass surgery
Remember –in patient
with unstable angina stress test is ‘contra indicated’.
IV.
INVASIVE TESTS
CORONARY ARTERIOGRAPHY:
Gives direct evidence; also
help to study extent and nature of ischemia /infarct;
Indication:
¬Done usually
to plan coronary by pass grafting or angioplasty.
¬Extent and
severity of the disease is assessable.
¬Rarely done
as diagnostic test; done only if non-invasive tests don’t diagnose pain.
RISK
STRATIFICATION IN ANGINA:
Low risk: predictable exertional angina, good effort tolerance, ischemia
only at high work load (ETT), single vessel or minor 2vessel disease,
High risk: Unstable
angina, Post infarct angina,
Poor effort
tolerance, ischemia at low workload, left main or 3vessel disease, poor LV
dysfunction
Patient may fall between these 2 groups
Computer programmes –
Cardiac Risk
Assessor is available for calculating risk.
Also coronary
risk charts are available.
Natural
History of Angina: types of progress
1.Patient may go on getting anginal pain for many years
without getting myocardial infarction and vice versa i.e. patient getting MI
without ever having suffered from angina
2. Over the
years patient can go on to unstable angina ie angina at rest or when losing temper.
3. If the
pain lasts for more than a few minutes and is accompanied by profuse sweating- diagnose Myocardial infarction.
********
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