Title: Evaluation of the Cardiac Patient for Non-cardiac Surgery
1Evaluation of the Cardiac Patient for Non-cardiac
Surgery
- Vincent Conte, MD
- Attending Anesthesiologist and
- Director of Anesthesia Services at
- Baptist Childrens Hospital (Ret.)
- Assistant Clinical Professor
- FIU School of Nursing
2Introduction
- Patients with co-existing Cardiac disease will be
coming for surgery very frequently for
NON-cardiac procedures - Familiarity with the AHA/ACC Guidelines is very
important to be able to adequately assess the
status of these patients.
3Topics of Discussion
- Familiarize yourselves with the AHA/ACC
Guidelines - Learn to identify which patients present a
significant risk of having a cardiac event
intraoperatively - Learn what steps in the evaluation process are
important to be done preoperatively to further
identify which patients are at risk
4Prevalence of Cardiovascular Disease
- Estimated 22,000,000 US Adults have significant
Coronary Artery Disease 17 per 1000 (2004 AHA) - Of these, 6,400,000 have active or unstable
angina - Another 50,000,000 have Hypertension (16) 217
per 1000 - There are 4,600,000 Strokes each year in the US
and 4,800,000 new cases of CHF
5Prevalence of Cardiovascular Disease
- That brings the total number of Americans who
have some type of Cardiovascular disease to
77,000,000 or 26 of the total population - The more alarming statistic is that approx. 14
of patients with Hypertension and a normal
resting EKG have undiagnosed SIGNIFICANT Coronary
Artery disease
6Cardiac Predictors
- All of the flow charts and models are based on
factors that are called Cardiac Predictors - They are graded as Minor, Intermediate, and Major
- The preop evaluation all depends on which
predictors are present and how many as well
7Minor Cardiac Predictors
8Intermediate Cardiac Predictors
9Major Cardiac Predictors
10Flow Charts Based on Predictors
- The following are the flow charts created by the
AHA/ACC based on which and how many predictors
are present preoperatively - Also keep in mind that your clinical judgment has
a lot to do with what level you place the patient
at within the flow charts - If you think the patient is sicker than they look
on paper, do not hesitate to place them in a
higher risk category to start with
11MET Scale
- Also used to place patients at their appropriate
positions in the flow charts is the MET Scale - This is based on a measure called a Metabolic
Unit - A unit is proportional to a certain amount of
physical exertion - Based on how many METs a person is functioning
at, an approximation of their cardiac status can
be made - IT IS VERY SUBJECTIVE, but can still act as a
quick screening scale to rapidly assess overall
cardiac status and health
12MET Scale
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14Intermediate Predictors
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18Cardiac Assessment
- You can see that for the most part, the charts
are easy to follow and do a good job of
delineating who and where a patient should be
placed in the sequence - However, a grey area exists with respect to newly
diagnosed Valvular Heart Disease that is deemed
mild by the Cardiologist - Some feel that this should be a MAJOR indicator
while others feel that it should be an
INTERMEDIATE indicator
19Cardiac Risk Assessment
- Other factors may help you determine what
category to put such patients. - Co-existing Hypertension or DM may bump them up
to MAJOR while a lack of symptoms and no other
co-existing disease may keep them in INTERMEDIATE - Regardless, a quick phone consultation should be
made with the Cardiologist and his
recommendations should be noted in the chart as
well as documenting that you DID contact the
Cardiologist in this matter - Then you would just proceed along the recommended
Anesthesia Treatment guidelines for whichever
Valvular lesion the patient might have
20Common Intraoperative Cardiac Conditions
- The most common Cardiac complications you may
encounter in the OR are - ST Segment changes (Intraop Ischemia)
- Myocardial Infarction
- Sinus Bradycardia
- Non-lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Pulmonary Edema
21ST Segment Changes
- This event can manifest as either elevation or
depression of the ST Segment - The etiology can vary
- 1) Inadequate coronary perfusion vs. demand (AS)
- 2) Acute Myocardial Ischemia or Infarction
- 3) Myocardial contusion (Trauma)
- 4) Electrolyte abnormalities (hypo/hyperkalemia,
hypercalcemia) - 5) Head injury with raised ICP and elevated
systemic blood pressure - 6) Hypothermia
- 7) Post-Defibrillation injury
22ST Segment Changes
- Typically, this is seen in
- Patients with pre-existing CAD
- Any changes causing either an increase in
myocardial O2 demand or decreased supply
(Tachycardia, hypertension/hypotension,
hypoxemia, hemodilution, or Coronary spasm) - After head or chest trauma
- During vaginal delivery or C-section
23ST Segment Changes
- PREVENTION
- Carefully evaluate and prepare patients with CAD
preoperatively - Carefully manage hemodynamics and hematocrit to
optimize myocardial O2 Balance - Identify and evaluate pre-existing ST segment
abnormalities preoperatively
24ST Segment Changes
- Manifestations
- In an awake patient, they may describe Chest pain
radiating into the arms and throat - Dyspnea
- Nausea and vomiting
- Altered level of consciousness or cognitive
function
25ST Segment Changes
- EKG/Systemic Manifestations
- Depression or elevation of the ST segment from
the isoelectric level - Development of Q waves
- Arrhythmias (PVCs, ventricular tachycardia,
Ventricular fibrillation - Hypotension
- Elevated ventricular filling pressures (stiff
ventricle) - V wave on pulmonary artery wedge tracing
26ST Segment Changes
- Management
- Verify ST segment changes (check lead placement,
compare to previous EKGs) - Ensure adequate oxygenation and ventilation
(check pulse oximeter, capnograph, send an ABG) - Treat tachycardia and/or hypertension (B-Blockade
with Esmolol, Labetolol, incr. depth of
anesthesia) - NTG IV Infusion, 0.25-2micrograms/kg/min
(titrate to desired effect) - Calcium Channel Blockade (Verapamil IV 2.5 mg,
Diltiazem IV 2.5 mg
27ST Segment Changes
- Management
- 6) Treat hypotension and/or bradycardia
- 7) Optimize circulating fluid volume
- 8) Support myocardial contractility as needed
using inotropic agents (Ephedrine, Dopamine,
Dobutamine, Epinephrine) - 9) AVOID NTG/CA Blockers until hypotension or
bradycardia are resolved - 10) Inform the surgeon if possible terminate
procedure early - 11) Send blood chemistries (ABG, H/H,
Electrolytes, Glucose, CK-MB, Troponin) - 12) Treat underlying causes of ST Segment changes
if other than Myocardial Ischemia
28ST Segment Changes
- COMPLICATIONS
- Myocardial Infarction
- Arrhythmias
- Cardiac Arrest
- Complications from placement of PA catheter
- Complications from placement of TEE
29Myocardial Infarction
- Defined as myocardial cell death due to
inadequate cellular perfusion. - Transmural (Q wave) infarctions involve the
entire thickness of the myocardial wall - Subendocardial (non-Q wave) infarctions involve
only the subendocardial portion of the myocardial
wall
30Myocardial Infarction
- Etiology
- Acute occlusion of a coronary artery (thrombus,
plaque) - Inadequate coronary perfusion for a given
myocardial O2 demand - Acute dissection of the aorta
31Myocardial Infarction
- Typical Situations
- In patients with pre-existing CAD/Angina Pectoris
- In older patients (gt70 years old)
- Patients with peripheral vascular disease
- Patients with DM (silent myocardial ischemia)
- During any acute change in myocardial O2 demand
or delivery (Tachycardia, hypertension,
hypotension, hypoxemia, hemodilution, or Coronary
spasm) - Patients with Aortic or Mitral STENOSIS
- Patients with recent CABG surgery
- Acute Carbon Monoxide poisoning
32Myocardial Infarction
- Prevention
- Carefully evaluate and prepare patients with CAD
preoperatively (evaluate myocardial function and
reserve is patient optimized?) - Avoid elective anesthesia and surgery in patients
with Unstable Angina or with a h/o MI in the
previous 6 months - Optimize hemodynamics and hematocrit during
anesthesia
33Myocardial Infarction
- Manifestations
- Differentiated from Ischemia by persistence and
progression of ST segment and T wave changes - Elevated cardiac isoenzymes
- Awake patient with chest pain, dyspnea, nausea
and vomiting - EKG abnormalities (ST depressions/elevations
hyperacute, prominent T waves development of Q
waves) - Arrhythmias (PVCs, V Tach, V Fib, AV Block,
Bundle branch block) - Hypotension, Tachycardia/Bradycardia
- Elevated Ventricular filling pressures
34Myocardial Infarction
- Management
- VERIFY manifestations of ongoing myocardial
ischenia (if patient is awake assess clinical
signs and symptoms, check lead placement and
check multiple leads, obtain a 12-lead EKG ASAP,
evaluate hemodynamic status) - INFORM the surgeon and terminate surgery ASAP
- Request ICU bed ASAP
- If present, treat Ventricular Arrhythmias (Lido
IV 1-1.5mg/kg bolus, then 1-4mg/min Procainamide
IV 500mg over 10-20 minutes, then 2-6mg/min)
35Myocardial Infarction
- Management
- 5) Place an arterial line and monitor blood
pressure VERY carefully - 6) Treat tachycardia (MOST important!!) and/or
hypertension (increase depth of anesthesia,
B-Blockade w/ Esmolol, Labetolol and/or Cardene
for hypertension) - 7) NTG IV _at_ 0.25-2 microgms/min (titrate PRN)
- 8) CA Channel Blockers (Verapamil IV 2.5 mg and
repeat as needed, or Diltiazem IV 2.5 mg, also
repeat as needed) - 9) If hypotension develops, maintain BP with
Neosynephrine and volume (cardiac perfusion takes
precedence over afterload reduction)
36Myocardial Infarction
- Management
- 10) Consider placing an SG cath to guide with
fluid management (go by LVEDP to avoid overload) - 11) Support myocardial contractility as needed
with Inotropes such as Dopamine, Dobutamine, Epi
(use with EXTREME caution as these will also
increase myocardial O2 demand) - 12) Avoid NTG and CA Channel Blockers until
hypotension or bradycardia are resolved - 13) Treat pain and anxiety if patient is awake
- 14) Send Labs (ABGs, H/H, electrolytes, CK,
CK-MB, Troponins) - 15) If hypotension persists consider placement of
an IABP to decrease workload of myocardium and
allow to rest and recooperate
37Myocardial Infarction
- Complications
- CHF
- Arrhythmias
- Cardiac Arrest
- Thrombus formation and complications from their
migration - Papillary muscle dysfunction or rupture
- Rupture of Interventricular septum or ventricular
wall
38Sinus Bradycardia
- Definition A heart rate less than 60 bpm in an
adult, in which the impulse formation begins in
the sinus node - Etiology
- Increased vagal tone (vaso-vagal, valsalva)
- Drug induced
- Hypoxemia
- Cardiac Ischemia
- Hypothermia
- Hypothyroidism
- Brain injury with herniation
- Physiologic (congenital physical conditioning)
39Sinus Bradycardia
- Typical Situations
- An isolated finding during preop evaluation
- Following administration of drugs (Narcotics,
Halothane, B-Blockers, CA Channel blockers,
Anticholinesterases, A2-agonists Clonidine) - During Vagal stimulation (Traction on eye or
peritoneum, Laryngoscopy and Intubation, Bladder
catheterization) - During hypertensive episodes (Baroreceptor
reflex) - During spinal/epidural anesthesia w/ high level
- ECT
40Sinus Bradycardia
- Prevention
- Premedicate patients at risk with
anticholinergics (Atropine IM 0.4 mg, Robinul IM
0.2 mg) - Treat bradycardia early during high
spinal/epidurals (Atropine IV 0.4-0.8mg, Robinul
IV 0.2-0.4mg) - Avoid excess traction on peritoneum or
extraoccular muscles - Avoid excess manipulation of the carotid sinus
41Sinus Bradycardia
- Manifestations
- Slow heart rate on EKG, Pulse Oximeter, A-Line,
NIBP Monitor, palpation of peripheral pulses - Hypotension
- Symptoms in a conscious patient Nausea,
Vomiting, Change in mental status - Junctional or Idioventricular escape beats
42Sinus Bradycardia
- Management
- Verify bradycardia and assess its hemodynamic
significance (Check MULTIPLE monitors to confirm
or palpate a peripheral pulse) - Ensure adequate oxygenation and ventilation
(bradycardia is common with hypoxic conditions
esp. in pediatric patients) - Call for help if significant hemodynamic changes
are associated with the bradycardia
43Sinus Bradycardia
- Management
- 4) If bradycardia IS associated with SEVERE
hypotension, loss of consciousness or seizures,
Rx with Epi IV, 10microgram bolus (1cc) and
repeat as needed until desired effect is achieved - 5) If Bradycardia fails to resolve with Epi,
consider Transcutaneous pacing and Isoproterenol
infusion at 1-3 micrograms/min. - 6) Begin CPR if necessary
44Sinus Bradycardia
- Management
- 7) If bradycardia is associated with only mild to
moderate hypotension (10-15 drop from pre-brady
rate), RX with Ephedrine IV in 5-10 mg increments
and/or Atropine IV 0.4mg and/or Robinul IV 0.2mg
Repeat above as necessary until desired effects
obtained - 8) Scan surgical field once brady is treated for
possible physical causes if none are present,
observe patient closely both intra and post-op
45Sinus Bradycardia
- Complications
- Escape arrhythmias (Junctional/Idioventricular)
- Cardiac Arrest
- Complications with pacer operation or placement
- Tachyarrhythmias and hypertension secondary to
drug treatment (overtreatment will result in
chasing your own tail)
46Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Definition
- Nonlethal ventricular (wide QRS complex)
arrhythmias NOT requiring ACLS although they may
eventually lead to ventricular fibrillation
47Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Etiology
- PVCs
- Abnormal automaticity of ventricular myocardium
- Re-entry phenomena
- Drug Toxicity
- R on T phenomenon
48Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Typical Situations
- PVCs provoked by tea, coffee, alcohol, tobacco,
or emotional excitement - Patients with Myocardial Ischemia or infarction
- Hypoxemia and/or hypercarbia
- Potassium and/or Acid Base disturbances
- Patients with Mitral Valve Prolapse
- Excessive depth of anesthesia
49Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Typical Situations
- 7) Direct Mechanical stimulation of the heart
- 8) Acute hypertension and/or tachycardia
- 9) Acute HYPOtension and/or bradycardia
- 10) Drugs (Halothane, Dig, Tricyclics,
Aminophylline, antihistamines - 11) Hypothermia
50Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Manifestations
- Wide QRS complex on EKG NOT preceeded by a P wave
- PVCs
- Ventricular tachycardia
- Torsade de pointes (paroxysms of V-tach in which
the QRS axis changes direction continuously)
51Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Management
- Ensure adequate oxygenation and ventilation
- Check if the arrhythmia is hemodynamically
significant - If it is Lidocaine IV 1-1.5 mg bolus consider
synchronized countershock if change is severe - Diagnose the arrhythmia
- If V-tach is present repeat Lido q/15 min and
start infusion at 1-4 mg/min consider synched
countershock
52Non-Lethal Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Management
- 6) If Torsade de pointes is present give MgSO4,
1-2 g bolus followed by infusion at 1 mg/min - 7) If PVCs ONLY are present with Tachycardia and
Hypertension deepen anesthesia with
IV/inhalational agents - 8) Evaluate for possible myocardial ischemia
53Summary
- Cardiac disease is becoming more and more
prevalent every year, so the fraction of your
patients who will have significant Cardiac
Disease will also be on the rise - Careful Preop evaluation and testing WILL reduce
the morbidity and mortality associated with any
patient who has pre-existing Cardiac disease
54Summary
- Unfortunately, due to time pressures and Surgeon
pressures, you may be tempted to just Go for it
and hope for the best BUT - DONT
- It will ultimately be your ass hung out to dry
and the surgeon will be saying that Anesthesia
never really told me how sick the patient was - Stick to your guns and make sure that the PATIENT
and their safety comes FIRST!!!!!!!