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CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES

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63,400,000 Americans have one or more forms of heart or blood vessel disease ... Acute Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack) - leading cause of death in U.S. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES


1
CARDIOVASCULAR EMERGENCIES
  • EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIAN - BASIC

2
Cardiovascular Disease
  • 63,400,000 Americans have one or more forms of
    heart or blood vessel disease
  • 50 of all deaths are cardiovascular disease

3
Cardiovascular Disease
  • Acute Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack) -
    leading cause of death in U.S.
  • 1.5 million Americans will have AMIs this year
  • Of these .5 million will die!
  • 350,000 will die in first two hours!

4
Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors
  • Major Uncontrollable
  • Age
  • Sex
  • Race
  • Heredity

5
Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors
  • Major Controllable
  • Smoking
  • High BP
  • High blood cholesterol
  • Diabetes

6
Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors
  • Minor Controllable
  • Obesity
  • Lack of exercise
  • Stress
  • Personality

7
Cardiovascular Disease
  • Control risk factors - decrease Coronary Artery
    Disease and Acute Myocardial Infarction

8
Coronary Artery Disease
  • Myocardium (heart muscle) requires continuous
    oxygen and nutrient supply
  • Myocardial blood supply passes through coronary
    arteries

9
Coronary Artery Disease
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Narrowing of lumen
  • plaque formation - related to Risk Factors
  • results in decreased myocardial perfusion
  • Poor tissue perfusion causes
  • tissue damage (ischemia)
  • tissue death (infarction)

10
Atherosclerotic Plaque Formation
11
Angina Pectoris A choking in the chest
  • Angere - to choke
  • Myocardial oxygen demand exceeds supply during
    periods of increased activity, exercise, or
    stressful event

12
Angina Pectoris
  • During stress the myocardium demands more O2
  • Coronary arteries would normally dilate to supply
    more blood and O2
  • In Angina Pectoris, the coronary arteries are
    unable to dilate sufficiently to increase
    perfusion

13
Symptoms -Angina Pectoris
  • Pain
  • Substernal
  • Squeezing/Crushing/Heaviness
  • May radiate to arms, shoulders, jaw, upper back,
    upper abdomen back
  • May be associated with shortness of breath,
    nausea, sweating

14
Symptoms -Angina Pectoris
  • Pain usually associated with 3Es
  • Exercise
  • Eating
  • Emotion

15
Symptoms -Angina Pectoris
  • Pain seldom lasts 30 minutes
  • Pain relieved by
  • Rest
  • Nitroglycerin

16
Symptoms -Angina Pectoris
  • Great anxiety/Fear
  • Fixation of the body
  • Pale, ashen, or livid face
  • Dyspnea (SOB) may be associated

17
Symptoms -Angina Pectoris
  • Nausea
  • Diaphoresis
  • BP usually up during attack
  • Dysrhythmia may be present

18
Angina Pectoris
  • Following an angina attack there is no residual
    damage to the myocardium

19
Forms of Angina Pectoris
  • Stable Angina
  • Occurs with exercise
  • Predictable
  • Relieved by rest or Nitroglycerin

20
Forms of Angina Pectoris
  • Unstable Angina
  • More frequent/severe
  • Can occur during rest
  • May indicate impending MI
  • Requires immediate treatment and transport to
    appropriate facility

21
Acute Myocardial Infarction Heart Attack
  • Inadequate perfusion of myocardium
  • Death of myocardium
  • Infarct
  • Damage to myocardium
  • Ischemia

22
Symptoms - AMI
  • Chest Pain - cardinal sign of myocardial
    infarction
  • Occurs in 85 of MIs
  • Substernal
  • Crushing, squeezing, tight, heavy

23
Symptoms - AMI
  • Chest Pain
  • May radiate to arms, shoulders, jaw, upper back,
    upper abdomen back
  • May vary in intensity
  • Unaffected by
  • swallowing
  • coughing
  • deep breathing
  • movement

24
Symptoms - AMI
  • Chest Pain
  • Unrelieved by rest/nitroglycerin
  • Pain lasts longer than angina pain (up to 12
    hours)
  • Silent MI
  • 15 of patients with MI,
  • particularly common in elderly and diabetics

25
Symptoms - AMI
  • Shortness of breath
  • Weakness, dizziness, fainting
  • Nausea, vomiting
  • Pallor and diaphoresis (heavy sweating)

26
Symptoms - AMI
  • Sense of impending doom
  • Denial
  • 50 of deaths occur in first two hours
  • Average patient waits 3 hours before seeking help

27
Symptoms - AMI
  • Changes in pulse, BP, respiration are not
    diagnostic of AMI

28
Acute Myocardial Infarction
  • Early recognition of MI is critical

29
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • When in doubt, manage all chest pain as MI

30
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • Begin management immediately if angina or MI are
    suspected.
  • Complete the history and physical exam as you
    treat.

31
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • Position of Comfort
  • Patent Airway
  • High concentration O2
  • non-rebreather mask 10-15 lpm

32
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • Reassure the patient
  • Obtain a brief history and physical exam
  • Aspirin 325mg p.o.

33
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • Nitroglycerin 0.4mg tablet sublingual
  • Patient should be sitting or lying down
  • Has Pt. Taken nitroglycerin in last 10 minutes?
    Is pain relieved? Headache?
  • Is BP 90 systolic?
  • q 5 minutes until pain relieved or three tablets
    administered

34
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • If pain is unrelieved by rest, oxygen,
    nitroglycerin or if a change has occurred in
    pattern of angina, transport immediately
  • Transport in semi-sitting position if BP normal
    or elevated flat if BP low

35
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • Do not walk patient to the ambulance
  • Do not use lights/siren if patient is awake,
    alert, breathing without distress
  • Monitor vital signs every 5-10 minutes

36
Management of Cardiac Chest Pain
  • Request early ALS back-up
  • Deaths in MI result from arrhythmia's
  • Arrhythmia's can be prevented with early drug
    therapy

37
Congestive Heart Failure
  • CHF Inability of heart to pump blood out as
    fast as it enters.
  • May be left-sided, right-sided, or both.

38
Congestive Heart Failure
  • Usually begins with left-sided failure.
  • Left ventricle fails
  • Blood stacks up in lungs
  • High pressure in capillary beds
  • Fluid forced out of capillaries into alveoli

39
Congestive Heart Failure
  • Right-sided failure most commonly caused by
    Left-sided failure. Blood backs up into
    systemic circulation
  • Distended neck veins
  • Fluid in abdominal cavity
  • Pedal edema

40
Causes of CHF
  • Coronary Artery Disease
  • Chronic hypertension (high blood pressure)
  • AMI
  • Valvular heart disease

41
Symptoms of CHF
  • Weakness
  • Dyspnea
  • Dyspnea on exertion
  • Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
  • Attacks of SOB that usually occur at night that
    awakens the patient

42
Symptoms of CHF
  • Orthopnea
  • Difficulty breathing in any position other than
    standing or sitting
  • Abdominal discomfort
  • Jugular Vein Distention (JVD)
  • Pedal Pitting edema in lower extremities

43
Symptoms of CHF
  • Tachycardia
  • Pulmonary Edema
  • Noisy, labored breathing
  • Coughing
  • Rales, wheezing
  • Pink, frothy sputum

44
Management of CHF
  • Sit patient up, let feet dangle
  • Administer high concentration O2
  • Assist ventilation as needed
  • Monitor vital signs q 5-10 minutes
  • Request early ALS back-up

45
Pacemaker Failure
  • Position of comfort
  • Patent airway
  • High Concentration O2
  • Assist ventilations as needed
  • ALS Intercept
  • CPR as needed
  • DO NOT worry about damage to pacemaker

46
Coronary Artery Bypass
  • Position of comfort
  • Patent airway
  • High Concentration O2
  • Assist ventilations as needed
  • ALS Intercept
  • CPR as needed
  • DO NOT worry about damage to sutures/staples or
    by-passed arteries

47
Implanted Defibrillator
  • If performing CPR on a patient
  • Implanted defibrillator may fire
  • May feel slight tingle
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