What is the definition of atheroma?
What is the definition of atherosclerosis?
Which vessels does atheromas affect?
affects arteries - slowly progressive
What are the causes of injury in an atheroma?
What are the stages of artheroma ?
How do artheromas clinical manifest?
Atherosclerotic plaques develop slowly over decades but may acutely cause symptoms due to..
A 65 year old gentleman with a history of hypertension presents with sudden onset dysphasia (language problems), left arm and leg weakness.
He had a similar episode 2 weeks ago, but it only lasted 1 minute.
A 70 year old gentleman who has smoked for most of his life has attended clinic.
Over the last year he has had severe pain in both his legs when walking for more than 10m, and has had a number of infected ulcers in his feet and lower legs requiring antibiotics.
50 year old gentleman with type 2 diabetes presents with 30 minute history of ‘central, crushing chest pain’.
The ECG showed marked ST elevation affecting V1 to V4.
The gentleman was taken to the cath lab for a revascularisation procedure (primary percutaneous coronary intervention(PCI)).
myocardial infarction
What is the treatment for atheromas?
- secondary prevention
What is the cause of ischaemic heart disease?
What are the causes of ischaemic heart disease?
What are the risk factors for ischaemic heart disease which are fixed and you cant change?
What are the risk factors for ischaemic heart disease which are potentially reversible with treatment?
What are the signs and symptoms of ischaemic heart disease?
What are the clinical presentations of ischaemic heart disease?
What is the difference between stable and un-stable angina?
Stable angina - lasts up to 20 min -induced by effort -resolved by rest or GTN Unstable angina -lasts longer - occurs at rest - often early symptom to MI
What happens with the plaque stages in stable angina, unstable angina, NSTEMI, STEMI?
stable angina - plaque disruption and spasm
unstable angina - partial thrombosis, possible emboli
NSTEMI + STEMI -plaque rupture, occlusion with thrombus
What investigations can be done to recognise angina’s?
What are complications of myocardial infarctions?
What are the treatments for anginas and acute coronary syndrome?
immediate treatments - oxygen - pain relief - aspirin Angina - lifestyle - nitrates (dilates vasculature) - B-blockers acute coronary syndrome - Thrombolytic therapy - PTCA (Percutaneous coronary intervention) - CABG (coronary artery bypass graft)
What are the major risk factors for atherosclerosis?
What are the other risk factors for atherosclerosis?