MEDCHROME:MEDICAL AND HEALTH ARTICLES
Home » Cardiology

Acute Myocardial Infarction, AMI or ‘Heart Attack"


Acute Myocardial Infarction

Definition:

chest pain Acute Myocardial Infarction, AMI or Heart Attack"

Myocardial infarction (MI) or acute myocardial infarction (AMI), is the interruption of blood supply to part of the heart, causing heart cells to die, commonly due to occlusion (blockage) of a coronary artery following the rupture of a vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque, which is an unstable collection of lipids and white blood cells in the wall of an artery.

The resulting ischemia and oxygen shortage, if left untreated for a sufficient period of time, can cause damage or death (infarction) of heart muscle tissue (myocardium).

Clinical Presentation:

Symptoms:

  • Pain is the cardinal symptom. Chest pain is often described as tightness, heaviness, crushing or squeezing in the chest. It is retrosternal and often radiates down the left arm , neck, epigastrium or back and sometimes the jaw , usually more severe and lasts longer than angina. Painless MI is seen in older and diabetic patients.
  • Diaphoretic, pale ,cool moist skin, anxiety and fear of impending death.
  • Breathlessness
  • Nausea and vomiting common in inferior wall MI
  • Collapse and syncope due to arrhythmia or profound hypotension.

Signs:

Signs of sympathetic activation- pallor, sweating, tachycardia

Signs of vagal activation- vomiting, bradycardia

Signs of impaired myocardial function- hypotension, oliguria, cold peripheries narrow pulse pressure raised jugular venous pressure (right ventricular infarct) third heart sound quiet first heart sound ,diffuse apical impulse lung crepitations.

Signs of tissue damage- fever

Signs of complication- mitral regurgitation, pericarditis

Diagnostic tests:

ECG-the earliest sign is usually ST elevation (appears within minutes)

AMI Acute Myocardial Infarction, AMI or Heart Attack"


Progressive loss of R wave , developing Q wave, resolution of ST elevation and terminal T wave inversion.(within hrs)

Deep Q wave and T wave inversion.(within days)

Old or established infarct pattern; Q wave tends to persist but the T wave changes become less marked.(after several weeks or months)

a) Transmural (Q wave) MI

-presence of ST elevation with subsequent development of pathologic Q waves.

Pathologic Q waves have a width of 0.04 seconds or more and an amplitude >=25% of the R wave in that lead.

MI can be classified based on the location of the Q waves:

Inferior MI:Q waves in II, III, aVF

High lateral MI:Q waves in I,Avl

Anteroseptal MI: Q waves in V1 through V3

Anteroseptal MI: Q waves in V4 through V6

Localized anterior MI:Q waves in V2 through V4

Anterior MI: Q waves in V1 through V6, I,aVL

Right ventricular MI:Q waves in V4 and V5

Posterior wall MI: large R in both V1 and V2 and Q in V6

b) Non Q wave MI:

involves subendocardial zone of left ventricle

does not exhibit any abnormal Q waves or ST elevation

exhibits marked ST segment depression of 1mm or more resulting in either horizontal or down-sloping ST segments in all precordial leads.

Cardiac Enzymes:

Enzyme                  Rise(hrs)                 Peak(hrs)                  Return to baseline(days)

troponin                      3-6                          12-24                                       7-10

CK-MB                          4-6                          12-36                                         3-4

LD                                   12                            24-48                                      10-14

Other blood tests: leucocytosis, ESR raised C-reactive protein raised

Chest X-ray: demonstrate pulmonary edema , cardiomegaly due to pre-existing myocardial damage.

Echocardiography: assessing left and right ventricular function and detecting important complications such as mural thrombus, cardiac rupture, VSD, mitral regurgitation and pericardial effusion.

Treatment:

1) Medical therapy

a) IV-O2 monitor

b) NTG-0.4 mg sublingually repeated every 2-5 minutes upto 3 times, if no relief use 5-10mg/min IV at 2-5 min intervals to a max. of 100mg/min

c) Aspirin : 160- 300mg PO preferably chewed

d) B blockers- cardioselective (B1 ) blockers

metoprolol:5-15mg IV over 5min

atenolol: 5-10 mg IV over 5min

e) Morphine: 2 mg IV bolus every 5 minutes titrated to effect

f) Magnesium: def. produce cardiac arrhythmias , secondary hypokalemia . 1-2g IV over 10-20 minutes followed by continuous infusion 1-2g/h

g) Thrombolytics: streptokinase, urokinase, anisoylated plasminogen streptokinase activator complex(APSAC, anistreplase), alteplase, retaplase.

Indications:

-Acute MI by ECG criteria of >0.1mV ST segment elevation in at least two contiguous leads or new left bundle branch block

-Absence of cardiogenic shock.

Administered in<6hrs most beneficial.

(note:-Thrombolytics are used in TT of MI but not unstable Angina)

h) arterial vasodilators:- are used in left and right ventricle infarct.

i) GP IIb-IIIa receptor inhibitors: used for non Q wave MI

j) Subcutaneous heparin(12,500U twice daily), given in addition to oral aspirin, may prevent reinfarction after successful thrombolysis and reduce risk of thromboembolic complications.

2) Surgical therapy

a)Percutaneous coronary transluminal angioplasty (PTCA)

b)Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG)

EARLY MANAGEMENT OF ACUTE MI
Provide facilities for defibrillation
Immediate measures

-High flow oxygen                                                                                                 -IV analgesia

-IV access                                                                                                                 -Aspirin 300 mg

-ECG monitoring

Reperfusion

Primary PCI or thrombolysis

Popularity: 20%

Last updated: August 17, 2010



Share/Bookmark this!

One Comment

Leave a reply

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

 

Who wrote this article?

This entry was posted by on January 2, 2010 at 12:43 pm and filed under Cardiology category.

Get Updates

Subscribe Via Email

Enter Your Email To Subscribe

Top Contributors

Administrator
Jemesh Singh Maharjan
Sulav Shrestha
Dr. Sujit
Dr. Mandeep Kunwar
Dr. Binit Vaidya

Log In

BMI Calculator



Calculate calories burnt »

Recent Comments

Relevant links

Proudly Hosted in Nepallink

Medchrome Info

"A physician who is a lover of wisdom is the equal to a god." - Hippocrates

Medchrome offers medical students, physicians and other health professionals an easy access to medical information and education materials. It also includes simplified health articles for readers interested in health and well being.

Some of the key features of Medchrome:
Medical cases, Picture galleries, Presentations, Health and Medical Videos, Mnemonics, Medical Student life and Ebooks.

online medical magazine, usmle, mbbs, nepalBloggers - Meet Millions of Bloggers Submit my blog General-Health Visit blogadda.com to discover Indian blogs