Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine (8 page)

BOOK: Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine
2.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

PREDISCHARGE CHECKLIST AND LONG-TERM POST-ACS MANAGEMENT

Risk stratification

• Stress test if anatomy undefined; consider stress if signif residual CAD post-PCI of culprit • Assess LVEF prior to d/c; EF ↑ ~6% in STEMI over 6 mo ( 
JACC
2007;50:149)
Medications (barring contraindications)

Aspirin
: 81 mg daily •
P2Y12 inhib
(eg, clopi, prasugrel or ticagrelor): ≥12 mo if stent (min 1 mo after BMS); some PPIs interfere w/ biotransformation of clopi and ∴ plt inhibition, but no convincing impact on clinical outcomes (
Lancet
2009;374:989;
NEJM
2010;363:1909); use w/PPIs if h/o GIB or multiple GIB risk factors ( 
JACC
2010;56:2051) •
β-blocker
: 23% ↓ mortality after MI •
Statin
: high-intensity lipid-lowering (eg, atorvastatin 80 mg,
NEJM
2004;350:1495) •
ACEI
: lifelong if HF, ↓ EF, HTN, DM; 4–6 wk or at least until hosp. d/c in all STEMI
? long-term benefit in CAD w/o HF (
NEJM
2000;342:145 & 2004;351:2058;
Lancet
2003;362:782)
• Aldosterone antag: 15% ↓ death if EF <40% & either DM or s/s of HF (
NEJM
2003;348:1309) • Nitrates: standing if symptomatic; SL NTG prn for all • Oral anticoagulants: if warfarin needed in addition to ASA/clopi (eg,  AF or LV thrombus), target INR 2–2.5. ? stop ASA if at high bleeding risk on triple Rx (
Lancet
2013;381:1107). Low-dose rivaroxaban (2.5 mg bid) in addition to ASA & clopi → 16% ↓ D/MI/stroke and 32% ↓ all-cause death, but ↑ major bleeding and ICH (
NEJM
2012;366:9).

ICD (
NEJM
2008;359:2245)

• If sust. VT/VF >2 d post-MI not due to reversible ischemia • Indicated in 1° prevention of SCD if post-MI w/ EF ≤30–40% (NYHA II–III) or ≤30–35% (NYHA I); need to wait ≥40 d after MI (
NEJM
2004;351:2481 & 2009;361:1427)
Risk factors and lifestyle modifications (
Circ
2011;124:2458)
• Low chol. (<200 mg/d) & fat (<7% saturated) diet; LDL goal <70 mg/dL; ? Ω;-3 FA • BP <140/90 mmHg; smoking cessation • If diabetic, tailor HbA1c goal based on Pt (avoid TZDs if HF) • Exercise (30–60 min 5–7 ×/wk); cardiac rehab; BMI goal 18.5–24.9 kg/m
2
• Influenza vaccination (
Circ
2006;114:1549); screen for depression
PA CATHETER AND TAILORED THERAPY

Rationale

• Cardiac output (CO) = SV × HR; SV depends on LV end-diastolic volume (LVEDV)
∴ manipulate LVEDV to optimize CO while minimizing pulmonary edema • Balloon at tip of catheter inflated → floats into “wedge” position. Column of blood extends from tip of catheter, through pulmonary circulation, to a point just proximal to LA. Under conditions of no flow, PCWP
LA pressure
LVEDP, which is proportional to LVEDV.
• Situations in which these basic assumptions fail:
(1) Catheter tip not in West lung zone 3 (and ∴ PCWP = alveolar pressure ≠ LA pressure); clues include lack of
a
&
v
waves and if PA diastolic pressure < PCWP
(2) PCWP > LA pressure (eg, mediastinal fibrosis, pulmonary VOD, PV stenosis)
(3) Mean LA pressure > LVEDP (eg, MR, MS)
(4) Δ LVEDP-LVEDV relationship (ie, abnl compliance, ∴ “nl” LVEDP may not be optimal)

Indications ( 
JACC
1998;32:840 &
Circ
2009;119:e391)


Diagnosis and evaluation
Ddx of shock (cardiogenic vs. distributive; esp. if trial of IVF failed or is high risk) and of pulmonary edema (cardiogenic vs. not; esp. if trial of diuretic failed or is high risk)
Evaluation of CO, intracardiac shunt, pulmonary HTN, MR, tamponade
Evaluation of unexplained dyspnea (PAC during provocation w/ exercise, vasodilator)

Therapeutics
(
Circ
2006;113:1020)
Tailored therapy to optimize PCWP, SV, S
v
O
2
in heart failure (incl end-stage) or shock
Guide to vasodilator therapy (eg, inhaled NO, nifedipine) in pulm HTN, RV infarction
Guide to perioperative management in some high-risk Pts, pretransplantation

Contraindications
Absolute
: right-sided endocarditis, thrombus/mass or mechanical valve; PE
Relative
: coagulopathy (reverse), recent PPM or ICD (place under fluoroscopy), LBBB (~5% risk of RBBB → CHB, place under fluoro), bioprosthetic R-sided valve

Efficacy concerns (
NEJM
2006;354:2213;
JAMA
2005;294:1664)

• No benefit to routine PAC use in high-risk surgery, sepsis, ARDS
• No benefit in decompensated HF ( 
JAMA
2005;294:1625); untested in cardiogenic shock • But: ~½ of CO & PCWP clinical estimates incorrect; CVP & PCWP not well correl.; ∴ use PAC to (a) answer hemodynamic ? and then remove, or (b) manage cardiogenic shock
Placement
• Insertion site:
R internal jugular
or
L subclavian veins
for “anatomic” flotation into PA •
Inflate
balloon (max 1.5 mL) when
advancing
and to
measure PCWP
• Use resistance to inflation and pressure tracing to avoid overinflation & risk of PA rupture •
Deflate
the balloon when
withdrawing
and at all other times • CXR should be obtained after placement to assess for catheter position and PTX
• If catheter cannot be successfully floated (typically if severe TR or RV dilatation) or if another relative contraindication exists, consider fluoroscopic guidance
Complications

Central venous access
: pneumo/hemothorax (~1%), arterial puncture (if inadvertent cannulation w/ dilation → surgical/endovasc eval), air embolism, thoracic duct injury •
Advancement
: atrial or ventricular arrhythmias (3% VT; 20% NSVT and >50% PVC), RBBB (5%), catheter knotting, cardiac perforation/tamponade, PA rupture •
Maintenance
: infection (esp. if catheter >3 d old), thrombus, pulm infarction (≤1%), valve/chordae damage, PA rupture/pseudoaneurysm (esp. w/ PHT), balloon rupture
Intracardiac pressures
• Transmural pressure (
preload) = measured intracardiac pressure – intrathoracic pressure • Intrathoracic pressure (usually slightly
) is transmitted to vessels and heart •
Always measure intracardiac pressure at end-expiration
, when intrathoracic pressure closest to 0 (“high point” in spont. breathing Pts; “low point” in Pts on
pressure vent.) • If ↑ intrathoracic pressure (eg, PEEP), measured PCWP
overestimates
true transmural pressures. Can approx by subtracting ~½ PEEP (× ¾ to convert cm H
2
O to mmHg).
• PCWP: LV preload best estimated at
a
wave; risk of pulmonary edema from avg PCWP

Cardiac output


Thermodilution
: saline injected in RA. Δ in temp over time measured at thermistor (in PA) is integrated and is
1/CO. Inaccurate if ↓ CO, sev TR or shunt.
BOOK: Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine
2.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Relatively Honest by Molly Ringle
Malice in Cornwall by Graham Thomas
The Sound of Thunder by Wilbur Smith
Hapless by Therese Woodson
Blackout by Thurman, Rob
The Norm Chronicles by Michael Blastland
One Mississippi by Mark Childress
Boys and Girls Together by William Saroyan
Hard Target by Jacobson, Alan
Secret Prey by John Sandford