Stable Angina
Predictable and consistent pain that occurs on exertion and is relieved by rest and/or nitroglycerin
Unstable Angina
Symptoms increase in frequency and severity; may not be relieved with rest and/or nitroglycerin
Variant Angina
Pain at rest with reversible ST-segment elevation; thought to be caused by coronary artery vasospasm
Silent Ischemia
Objective evidence of ischemia (ECG changes during stress test), but pt reports no pain
Angina Pectoris: Meds
Nitroglycerin: Pt Teaching
MONA
Management of MI
MI: Door to Balloon Time
90 minutes
PCI: Post-procedure Care
Coronary Bypass: Number One Complication
Pneumonia
Coronary Bypass: Post-procedure Assessment
-Asses for: Decreased CO, fluid volume and electrolyte imbalances, impaired gas exchange, impaired cerebral circulation
Cardiogenic Shock
Cardiogenic Shock S/S
Cerebral hypoxia (restlessness, confusion, agitation), Decreased BP, rapid/weak pulse, cold/clammy skin, tachypnea, crackles
Sudden Cardiac Arrest: Management
Mitral Regurgitation
- “Systolic murmur”, high-pitched, blowing
Aortic Regurgitation
Aortic Stenosis
- Low-pitched systolic murmur
Infective Endocarditis
Myocarditis
- S/S: Flu-like symptoms, ST depression, gallop rhythm
Pericarditis
Left Heart Failure: S/S
Right Heart Failure: S/S
Left Heart Failure: Management