Emergency Management of STEMI
|
Certified
for 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™
Sponsored by the University
of Alabama School of Medicine
Division of Continuing Medical Education
| Release Date:
February 19, 2007 |
Expiration
Date: February 19, 2010
|
| TARGET
AUDIENCE: |
| Primary
care physicians |
| ABSTRACT: |
| Rapid
evaluation and reperfusion following ST-segment elevation
myocardial infarction determines outcome and mortality rate. |
| OBJECTIVES: |
| The
reader will be aware of the rationale for rapid intervention
following myocardial infarction and the best approach based
on clinical findings and local therapeutic options. |
| Top of Page |
| FACULTY: |
|
Silvio
E. Papapietro, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine
Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Disease
The University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama
|
| DISCLOSURE: |
In accordance
with the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education
Standards for Commercial Support, the faculty report the
following affiliations:
Silvio E. Papapietro, MD, has no conflicts of interest to disclose. |
| CME
PARTICIPATION: |
| To
participate in this program for CME credit, please review
the objectives before beginning the program. Complete the
course and the self-assessment test before February 19, 2010
to receive CME credit. Your certificate will then be available
online. This process should take approximately 15 minutes. |
| ACCREDITATION: |
|
The University of Alabama School
of Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council
for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing
medical education for physicians.
The University of Alabama School
of Medicine designates this educational activity for a
maximum of 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 credit(s)™.
Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the
extent of their participation in the activity.
The boards of nursing in many
states, including Alabama, recognize Category 1 continuing
medical education courses as acceptable activities for
the renewal of license to practice nursing.
|
| Top of Page |
| Introduction: |
TIME.
Method To Help
Patients Survive MI*
Talk
to your patients about:
•Risk of MI and recognition of symptoms
•Rationale for rapid action
•The need to call 911 within 5 minutes of symptom onset
Investigate:
•Feelings about MI
•Barriers to symptom evaluation/response
•Personal and family history of acute MI
Make a Plan:
•Help patients and family make a plan
if MI symptoms occur
•Encourage patients and family to rehearse the plan
Evaluate:
•Patient’s understanding of recommendations
and risk of delay
•Family’s understanding of risk and their plan for action
*From
ACC and AHA
|

Each
year, an estimated 1.6 million Americans suffer from an
acute coronary syndrome, sudden chest pain caused by a
spectrum of clinical conditions ranging from unstable angina
to non-Q-wave or Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI). Yet,
a 2005 study found clinicians provided optimal treatment
to less than half of patients with an acute coronary syndrome
because existing guidelines were lengthy, complex, and
difficult to implement in local settings (JAMA.
2005;293:349-357). For
the 500,000 people with an acute coronary syndrome
who present
to emergency departments with ST-segment elevation MI (STEMI)
in any given year, rapid triage to restore coronary blood
flow is crucial to prevent permanent myocardial damage. “In
patients with STEMI, treatment delayed is effectively treatment
denied, ;says UAB Acute Chest Pain Center Director
Silvio E. Papapietro, MD. ;Shortening time to reperfusion
in patients with STEMI limits myocardial damage and significantly
reduces mortality. Up to a 50% reduction in mortality can
be achieved if ischemic myocardium is reperfused within
30 to 45 minutes of symptom onset.”
Classic
symptoms of STEMI include crushing chest pain or pressure,
usually lasting more than 5 minutes, dyspnea, weakness,
and nausea. Other symptoms include sweating and chest discomfort
that may radiate to the arms, back, neck, jaw, or abdomen.
“Early
angiography shows about 90% of patients with STEMI have
a coronary thrombus, which often occludes the infarct artery,
compared with thrombus formation in 35% to 75% of patients
with non-STEMI or unstable angina and 1% of patients with
stable angina. Therefore, it is critical to promptly reperfuse
the occluded infarct-related artery through pharmacological
or catheter-based interventions, ”he says.
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| Top of Page |
| Prompt
Protocols |
The
American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart
Association (AHA) have revised practice guidelines to shorten
the time from symptom onset to reperfusion (J Am
Coll Cardiol. 2004;44:E1-E211). Updated guidelines
advise physicians to complete a directed history and physical
examination within 5 to 10 minutes so a rapid two-stage
decision can be made: Is reperfusion indicated, and if
so, which reperfusion strategy is most effective?
The
new guidelines are designed to improve triage and management
decisions by first responders, emergency medical technicians,
emergency department staff, and cardiologists, says
Papapietro, who, in December 2005 implemented UAB’s
3-level chest pain directive system for rapid patient management.
Patients with STEMI are considered the most emergent, followed
by those with non-STEMI/unstable angina, then persons experiencing
chest pain of probable cardiac origin.
Whenever
STEMI is suspected, the goal is to perform a 12-lead electrocardiogram
(ECG) within 10 minutes of patient presentation. ST-segment
elevation identifies those most likely to benefit from
reperfusion,”he says. “Every minute delayed
is precious time wasted, because heart muscle is dying.
We must try to reperfuse the artery and restore blood flow
in a very short period of time.”
In emergency
departments across the nation, physicians evaluating STEMI
patients must rapidly decide whether to treat patients
with immediate fibrinolysis or transfer them to a tertiary
cardiac care center for percutaneous coronary intervention
(PCI). Primary PCI achieves complete reperfusion in more
than 90% of patients and is associated with less risk of
stroke than fibrinolysis. However, only 20% of US hospitals
have cardiac catheterization laboratories, and fewer provide
PCI, an approach that requires significant cost and expertise.
At UAB
we emphasize two critical goals from the updated guidelines:
no more than 30 minutes from ‘door to needle’ ie,
from emergency department arrival to fibrinolysis and
no more than 90 minutes from arrival to PCI the
time from ‘door to balloon,’”he says. “Each
30-minute delay from symptom onset to balloon inflation
increases 1-year mortality by 7.5%. Waiting 6 hours for
enzyme levels, such as troponin and creatinine kinase,
may be useful when chest pain patients present with atypical
ECG findings, but the delay is unacceptable for patients
with ST-segment elevation, when a delay of 3 to 5 hours
leads to significant, irreversible myocardial damage.”
A 2005
review of the National Registry of Myocardial Infarction
found average door-to-balloon times for Americans transferred
for primary PCI was close to 3 hours, far beyond proposed
limits (Circulation. 2005;111:761-767).
PCI centers with rapid-management chest pain protocols,
such as those at UAB, can provide 90-minute door-to-balloon
times if patients can be transferred within 1 hour. But
across the rural South, where transport times to the closest
hospital with PCI capability may extend far beyond the
guidelines’60 minute limit, initial fibrinolysis
may be a better strategy.
Fibrinolytic
therapy is effective in up to 75% of patients, and it is
most beneficial when given within 3 hours of symptom onset,
when fresh clots are more likely to dissolve, ”he
says. “Tisue plasminogen activator requires an infusion,
whereas tenecteplase and the recombinant plasminogen activator
reteplase can be administered in bolus form; all are equally
effective, although there are differences in fibrin selectivity
and drug half-life.
|
| Relative
Risks: |
|
Fibrinolytic
therapy must be given within 12 hours of symptom onset
to benefit functional outcomes or mortality. Because of
the serious risk of hemorrhage, fibrinolysis is contraindicated
when patients have any prior known structural cerebral
vascular lesion or intracranial hemorrhage, suspected aortic
dissection, active bleeding or bleeding diathesis, recent
closed head trauma, or severe uncontrolled hypertension.
“Patients
on anticoagulants with no other contraindications may need
to stop these medications and receive fibrinolysis, ”Papapietro
says. “When transport times surpass guideline recommendations
and patients are ineligible for fibrinolysis, they should
be transferred for PCI as quickly as possible.”
PCI may
have limited benefit over fibrinolysis if performed more
than 3 hours after symptoms begin, yet it remains the preferred
route for certain high-risk patients such as those older
than 75 years or those who cannot receive fibrinolytics.
Patients who are transferred to an acute cardiac care facility
and determined ineligible for PCI due to coronary anatomy,
mechanical MI complications, or other issues may still
benefit from hemodynamic support with an intraaortic balloon
pump or coronary artery bypass grafting.
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| Top of Page |
| Combining
Therapies: |
|
A recent
review of reperfusion strategies suggests STEMI patients
who receive pharmacologic fibrinolysis may benefit from
transfer to a PCI-capable facility if the therapy fails
to restore blood flow to infarcted myocardium. In addition,
most patients with STEMI who undergo successful reperfusion
with fibrinolytics will benefit from subsequent coronary
angiography and PCI if there is significant residual stenosis
in the infarcted artery that may lead to recurrent ischemia.
The
most important message from the revised guidelines is to
realize that simplified, evidence-based protocols are in
place for clinicians at every level to streamline reperfusion
and improve outcomes for patients with STEMI, Papapietro
concludes.
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| Top of Page |
|
For
more information:
|
Dr.
Silvio Papapietro
1-800-UAB-MIST
mist@uabmc.edu
|
|
| Self-Assessment
Test: |
| To
apply for 0.25 Category 1 credit, complete the self-assessment
test and you should receive an online certificate immediately. |
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To
take the test click
here!
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