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1

ACUTE ST ELEVATION 

MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION

(STEMI

)


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By The End of This Lecture You Should Be 

Able To

• Differentiate ACS from other acute chest pain emergency 

conditions

• Diagnose STEMI using clinical, ECG, and biochemical tools
• Recognize the various steps of management of the patients 

before and after reaching hospital

2


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Objectives 

• Appreciate the vital importance of time in the proper 

management of STEMI

• Appreciate that STEMI is caused by complete obstruction of 

a coronary artery by thrombus

• Understand that thrombus removal is the cornerstone of 

management

• When the ECG shows ST elevation, attempts at reperfusion 

should take priority over further investigations 


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Clinical Scenario 1

• A 60-year-old man with Hx of  diabetes, hypertension, and 

smoking is brought to the emergency room by his family 
because of severe chest pain 


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What Conditions Cause Acute chest pain?

• ACS (STEMI, NSTEMI)
• Aortic dissection
• Acute pericarditis
• Pulmonary embolism and infarction
• Pneumothorax
• Extracardiac causes: esophageal spasm, visceral obstruction 

or perforation, musculo-skeletal chest pain


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Clinical Presentation of ACS, including STEMI

Pain:
• Chest, back, shoulder, epigastrium, neck, throat, mandible, 

arms, hands 

• Prolonged
• Severe
• Not relieved!


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7

ACS (STEMI): Clinical features

Other features
• Severe anxiety
• Nausea and vomiting
• Breathlessness
• Collapse
• Syncope 


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8

STEMI: PHYSICAL SIGNS

• Signs of sympathetic activation:  

• Pallor
• Sweating
• Tach

ycardia

• Signs of vagal activation

• Vomiting 
• B

radycardia 


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9

STEMI: PHYSICAL SIGNS          

• Signs of impaired myocardial function

• Hypotension, oliguria, cold sweat
• Narrow pulse pressure
• Raised JVP
• S3
• Faint S1
• Diffuse apical impulse
• Lung 

crepitations


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10

STEMI: DIFFERENTIAL Dx

• Aortic dissection: 

• Pain is abrupt & severe from the onset, tearing in nature, more in 

the back

• Pulmonary embolism

• Dyspnea, tachypnea, tachycardia, hypotension

• Acute pericarditis: 

• Important to differentiate, as thrombolytic therapy may cause 

cardiac tamponade

• Pain is sharp, related to breathing , posture and swallowing

• Pericardial friction rub


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STEMI: Diagnosis & Basic Investigations

• Clinical presentation
• ECG
• Troponin (indicating myocardial cell injury)
• Enzymes indicating myocardial cell necrosis: CPK, AST, 

LDH


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STEMI Diagnosis, additional investigations

• Echocardiography
• CXR
• Blood tests: WBC, ESR


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Tetrad of Diagnosis

•Chest pain
•Classical ECG showing ST elevation
•Raised troponin
•Raised markers of myocardial cell necrosis


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The ECG in STEMI

Sequence of changes in STEMI:
1. Tented, peaked T waves
2. Acute ST elevation (the current of injury)
3. Loss of amplitude of the R wave
4. Development of a Q wave 
5. T wave inversion
6. Reduction in the magnitude of the ST elevation (ST resolution)
7. Deepening of Q waves


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The ECG in STEMI

• Hyperacute T waves


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16

STEMI: ECG

• ST segment elevation: the earliest ECG change

STEMI   

normal

angina


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17

STEMI: ECG

• Next: reduction of R wave amplitude, appearance of Q 

waves, T inversion


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18

STEMI: ECG

• Then: deepening of Q waves, T inversion & resolution of ST 

segment


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19

STEMI: ECG

• 12 weeks after MI, the ST segment returns completely to 

normal


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20

Acute Anterior MI


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21

Acute inferior MI


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STEMI Diagnosis: 

Biochemical markers


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Biochemical markers

• Troponin T (Tn T)
• Troponin I (Tn I)
• Creatinine Kinase (CK)
• Creatinine kinase MB (CK-MB)
• Others: AST, LDH


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Biochemical Markers


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Biochemical Markers: Troponins

cTn-T & cTn-I: 
• More specific than CK & CK-

MB

• Start to rise in 4-6 hours 
• Persist in the circulation for  2 

weeks

• Troponins are elevated in 

unstable angina but to less 
severe degree.


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Biochemical Markers

CK (creatinine kinase):
• Found in skeletal muscles (MM isoenzyme), in the brain (BB 

isoenzyme) and in the myocardium (MB isozyme)

• Starts to rise at 4-6 hours,

peaks at 12 hrs, and 
disappears in 36-48 hrs


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30

Biochemical Markers

CK is not specific for cardiac muscle, it may rise in 

• Intramuscular injection
• Physical exercise
• Defibrillation

CK-MB is more specific and sensitive for cardiac muscle 

injury


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31

Biochemical Markers

CK-MB is not elevated with the administration of DC shock or 

skeletal muscle injury.


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Further Testing?

• If the ECG shows ST elevation, time should be 

reserved for immediate management!

• Other investigations should be done after reperfusion 

therapy


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33

Other Blood Tests

• Leukocytosis: 

• Neutrophilia
• Reaches a peak on the first day
• Correlates 

with the extent of myocardial damage, i.e. with prognosis

• Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR)
• C-Reactive Protein (CRP)


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Chest X-Ray

• Pulmonary edema

• Heart size: 

• Usually normal 
• Cardiomegaly 

due to old myocardial infarctions 


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Echocardiography 

• Usually done after reperfusion therapy
• Can be performed at the bedside
• Useful to assess the status of the LV & RV
• Detects mechanical complications

• LV mural thrombus
• Ventricular septal rutpture
• Mitral regurgitation
• Pericardial effusion
• RV infarction


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Clinical Scenario 2

• A 70-year-old man suffers severe chest pain with sweating 

and severe weakness while at rest.


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This patient Probably 
Sustained ACS (Infarction, 
Heart Attack)


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Immediate (Prehospital) management

• DO NOT PANIC!
• Call for help, ambulance
• Transfer to  a safe place, 

remove tight clothes, 
administer sublingual 
angised if available…..


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Immediate (Prehospital) management

• Observe pulse, BP (if 

possible) and level of 
consciousness

• Transfer to hospital as 

soon as possible


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• What is the immediate danger to the patient?


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What is the imminent danger to this patient?

Acute cardiovascular collapse & death, caused by
• Arrhythmia (VF)
• Cardiac standstill

• Patient becomes pulseless and unconscious


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Immediate (Prehospital) management: CPR

• In case patient becomes pulseless and unresponsive: 

administer CPR (cardio-pulmonary rescuscitation)


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Immediate (Prehospital) management

AED: automatic 
external Defibrillator: 
If available, give DC 
shock, continue CPR 
until restoration of 
pulse, repeat DC if 
necessary


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Prehospital management

• Advanced Life Support (ALS)


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Transferring The Patient

• Rapid transfer of the patient to hospital: ambulance


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• Ambulance should be well 

equipped:

• Defibrillators
• Analgesia 
• Oxygen
• Monitors
• ECG machines 
• Thrombolytic therapy?


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Early managemnt: immediate measures

• Cannula 
• Oxygen
• ECG monitoring
• Standard (12-lead) ECG
• Analgesia: morphine sulphate


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50

REPERFUSION 

THERAPY


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51

STEMI

• Myocardial necrosis caused by thrombotic occlusion of a 

coronary artery 

• Occlusive thrombus is formed at site of rupture of 

atherosclerotic plaque 


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Reperfusion

• Once diagnosis is established, reperfusion should be 

attempted

• Should be done as soon as possible
• The situation is an emergency: minutes mean muscle


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THE KEY TO PROPER MANAGEMENT OF ACUTE 

MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION IS THE TIMELY AND 

IMMEDIATE REMOVAL OF THROMBUS 

OBSTRUTION  AND RESTORATION OF BLOOD FLOW 

TO THE INFARCTED SEGMENT. THIS IS EXPECTED 

TO PREVENT LOSS OF MYOCARDIUM, IMPROVE LV 

FUNCTION, IMPROVE QUALITY OF LIFE, AND 

PROLONG SURVIVAL.

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Reperfusion

• Restoration of coronary patency
• Resolution of acute ST elevation 
• Reduces myocardial infarct size
• Relieves pain
• Preserves LV function
• Improves survival


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Reperfusion

• May reduce arrhythmias, but may exacerbate these 

arrhythmias (reperfusion injury)

• Should be administered as soon as possible to achieve 

maximal salvage of myocardium (minutes mean muscle)


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Methods of Reperfusion

•Pharmacological (thrombolytic therapy)


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Mechanical (primary PCI)

• Mechanical (primary PCI)


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Reperfusion: Thrombolytic therapy

• Thrombolytic agents:

• Streptokinase
• Alteplase (tPA) 
• Tenecteplase (TNK)
• Reteplase (rPA)


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Reperfusion: Thrombolytic therapy

• Thrombolysis is of no benefit (and may be harmful):

• If given > 12 hours from the onset of STEMI

(preferably given within the first 6 hours)

• In cases of NSTEMI or unstable angina


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60

Thrombolytic Complications

Bleeding: 
• Cerebral hemorrhage : 

• It may be wise to withhold treatment if there is significant risk of bleeding

• With streptokinase:

• the development of antibodies to the drug that render future administration 

of the drug ineffective

• hypotension


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Thrombolysis: Contraindications 

Absolute contraindications:
• Known bleeding tendency
• Active bleeding (except menstruation)
• History of cerebrovascular occlusion within the previous year
• History of intracranial hemorrhage
• Cerebral or spinal tumor


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Reperfusion therapy: primary PCI

• Associated with better results than thrombolytic 

therapy

• Requires specialized experience and expensive 

equipment

• Should be performed as soon as possible (minutes 

mean muscles)

• Indicated in cases of failure of thrombolytic therapy or 

when such therapy is contraindicated. 


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Objectives 

• Be familiar with the management of the patient with 

established myocardial infarction

• Understand STEMI complications in the CCU: Mechanical and 

electrical

• Appreciate the long-term management of patients with 

STEMI


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Clinical Scenario 3: 

• A 63-year-old diabetic woman sustained an anterior wall 

STEMI. 

• Was transferred in time to hospital 
• Received thrombolytic therapy with t-PA with resolution of 

ST changes and disappearance of chest pain

• Was transferred to the CCU
• Echo showed mild hypokinesia of the anterior wall with good 

systolic function

• What is the next step in management?


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Maintaining Vessel Patency

• Aspirin
• Clopidogrel 
• Anticoagulants 


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Maintaining Vessel Patency: ASA

• Oral ASA (75-350 mg/day)
• Reduces mortality
• Should be continued for life
• Combination with clopidogrel: improves outcome 


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Maintaining Patency: Anticoagulants

• Heparin:

• Unfractionated heaprin and LMWH
• Improve survival of patients with STEMI
• Slight increase in the risk of intracranial bleeding
• Not given after successful primary PCI


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Antithrombotic therapy


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Oral Antithrombotic therapy?

• Warfarin 
• Direct acting oral anti-coagulants:

• Direct thrombin inhibitors: dabigatran
• Factor Xa inhibitors: apixaban, rivaroxaban

Indications:
• Atrial fibrillation
• Extensive anterior wall MI with LV dysfunction
• The demonstration of mobile thrombus on echocardiography


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Management of STEMI

• Early management
• Maintaining vessel patency
• Adjunctive therapy


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Adjunctive Therapy

• β-blockers
• Nitrates (?)
• ACE inhibitors
• Lipid-lowering agents (statins)


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Adjunctive Therapy: β-blockers

• During the acute presentation:

• i.v. administration
• Atenolol or metoprolol
• Reduce pain
• Reduce arrhythmia
• Improve short term survival

• Contraindicated:

• Congestive heart failure
• Heart block
• bradycardia


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Adjunctive Therapy: β-blockers

Long term use of β-blockers :

Should be given to ALL patients unless contraindicated

Improve long term survival


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Adjunctive Therapy: ACE inhibitors, Statins

• Essential for the secondary prevention of atherosclerosis 
• ACE inhibitors are also useful to maintain LV function
• When side-effects develop to ACE inhibitors, ARBs should be 

used


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Complications of STEMI: Clinical Scenario 4

• A 55-year-old hypertensive and smoker sustains an extensive 

anterior infarction. He is only transferred to hospital 24 
hours after the attack. The ECG shows established anterior 
wall MI, with deep Q waves, ST elevation, and T inversion in 
the anterior leads. No thrombolytic therapy was 
administered

• What are the expected complications?


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COMPLICATIONS OF STEMI

• Short-term complications

• Arrhythmias
• Mechanical complications
• Residual ischemia
• Pericarditis
• embolism

• Long term complications

• Recurrnet ischemia
• LVdysfunction


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complications

• Arrhythmias
• Mechanical complications
• Acute circulatory failure
• Residual ischemia
• Pericarditis
• embolism


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complications

tachy arrhythmias

ventricular

• Arrhythmias                 

atrial

brady arrhythmias


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Tachyarrhythmias

• Ventricular:

– Premature ventricular ectopics (PVCs)
– Accelerated idioventricular rhythm
– Ventricular tachycardia
– Ventricular fibrillation

• Atrial 

– Atrial fibrillation


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Tachyarrhythmias

The patient collapsed in the CCU!
• What is the diagnosis
• What’s the urgent treatment?
• What drug is given to prevent recurrence?


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Tachyarrhythmias

Ventricular fibrillation:
• The major cause of death in 

patients with STEMI before 

reaching hospital

• Occurs in 5-10% of patients who 

reach hospital

• Lethal arrhythmia unless treated 

by prompt defibrillation

• Does not affect the long term 

prognosis of acute MI.

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Tachyarrhythmias

Atrial fibrillation:
• Common in acute MI
• Frequently transient
• May be serious if it 

occurs in the context of 
LV failure

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Atrial Fibrillation: Treatment

• May be transient and needs no treatment
• Indications to treat:

• Rapid ventricular rate
• Hemodynamic deterioration (hypotension, CHF, pulmonary 

edema)

• Emergency treatment:

• Synchronized DC shock

• Non-emergency situation:

• Infusion of β-blocker or amiodarone


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Bradyarrhythmia: AV block

In the setting of inferior MI:
• Usually temporary
• Resolves with thrombolytic 

therapy

• May need atropine if persists
• If there is hemodynamic 

deterioration:

temporary pacemaker insertion 

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Bradyarrhythmia: AV block

In the setting of anterior wall MI:
• More serious than in inferior MI
• May be complicated by sudden asystole
• Prophylactic temporary pacemaker should be inserted


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complications

• Arrhythmias
• Mechanical complications
• Acute circulatory failure
• Residual ischemia
• Pericarditis
• embolism


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Mechanical complications

• Papillary muscle rupture
• Interventricular septal rupture
• Ventricular free wall ruputre


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Papillary Muscle Rupture


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Papillary muscle rupture

• Sudden severe mitral regurgitation (MR)
• Presents with pulmonary edema & shock
• O/E: pansystolic murmur at the apical area radiating to the 

axilla or back. S3 & S4

• The murmur is frequently faint or even absent
• Dx: echo and Doppler 
• Treatment: urgent surgery


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Ventricular Septal Rupture


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Ventricular Septal rupture

• Sudden deterioration: 

hypotension, right ventricular 
failure, shock

• Clinically: pansystolic murmur at 

the left sternal border

• Diagnosis: echo and Doppler
• Treatment: surgery

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complications

• Arrhythmias
• Mechanical complications
• Acute circulatory failure
• Residual ischemia
• Pericarditis
• Embolism


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Acute circulatory failure

(Cardiogenic Shock)

• Indicates extensive myocardial damage
• Usually fatal without intervention
• Mortality of 90% if untreated
• With primary PCI: can be reduced to 25%


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Management of cardiogenic shock

• Calculating cardiac output & systemic vascular resistance 

(Swan-Ganz catheter)

• The use of inotropic drugs, diuretics, &/or vasodilators 

according to the calculations

• Circulatory assistance with intra-aortic balloon pump
• Primary PCI


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complications

• Arrhythmias
• Mechanical complications
• Acute circulatory failure
• Residual ischemia
• Pericarditis
• Embolism


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Residual Ischemia

• Presents as post infarction angina
• Causes of residual ischemia:

• Significant stenosis of an artery after successful thrombolysis
• Blockage of an artery that was responsible for the collateral supply of another 

coronary artery

• Occurs in ~ 50% of patients with AMI


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Residual Ischemia: Management

High risk group of unstable angina
• i.v. nitrates, β-blockers, Oxygen (if necessary)
• Aspirin
• Clopidogrel
• Anticoagulation
• Invasive strategy (PCI or CABG)


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complications

• Arrhythmias
• Mechanical complications
• Acute circulatory failure
• Residual ischemia
• Pericarditis
• embolism


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Pericarditis Following STEMI

• Acute pericarditis
• Post MI syndrome (Dressler’s Syndrome)


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Acute Pericarditis 

• Usually occurs in the 2

nd

& 3

rd

days

• Chest pain of different quality than ischemic:

• Sharp
• Localized
• Positional
• Related to breathing: worse on inspiration

• Pericardial friction rub
• ECG changes of acute pericarditis


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Acute Pericarditis: Management

• The use of steroids or NSAID is contraindicated in AMI:

• Weakening of scar
• Increase the risk of aneurysm formation

• Aspirin in high dose
• colchicine 
• Opiate-based analgesia


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Post-MI-Pericarditis

(Dressler’s syndrome)

• Auto-immune reaction
• May occur 6 days-6 months after MI
• Pain (pleuro-pericarditis)
• Pyrexia 
• Pericarditis
• Pleurisy
• Treatment: High dose ASA, NSAID, colchicine, 

or even steroids


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Complications: Ventricular 

Remodelling

• Infarct expansion: thinning

& stretching of the 

infarcted segment


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Complications: Ventricular Remodelling

• Compensatory hypertrophy 
of the remaining muscle
• Increased myocardial wall

tension

109


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Complications: Ventricular Remodelling

• Eventual dilatation and 
dysfunction of LV,

with the formation 
of aneurysm

110


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Drugs Used to Prevent Remodelling

• Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors
• Angiotensin receptor blockers
• Beta receptor blockers
• Mineralocorticoid antagonists
• Neprilysin inhibitors (sacubitril)


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Management After Discharge From 

Hospital

• Risk stratification
• Secondary prevention
• Rehabilitation 


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Risk Stratification after MI

Assessment for 
•Residual ischemia
•Left ventricular function
•arrhythmias


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Residual Ischemia

• Symptomatic patient: Coronary angio with a view to 

revascularization

• Asymptomatic: 

• Stress testing: routinely done after 4 weeks
• If high risk criteria                 coronary angio
• If not                    repeat ETT every year or if new 

symptoms appear


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Assessment of LV function

• Clinically
• ECG
• CXR
• Echo

• Radioisotope study


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In Patients with LV dysfunction

• Look for reversible ischemia: coronary angio
• ACE inhibitors (captopril, enalapril, lisinopril)
• Angiotensin receptor blocker (ARBs) (valsartan, 

losartan, candisartan) in patients who can’t 

tolerate ACEI

• β-blockers: metoprolol, bisoprolol, & carvedilol
• Aldosterone receptor antagonist: 

spironolactone, eplerenone

• ARB/neprilysin inhibitor (valsartan/sacubitril)


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Arrhythmias 

• Recurrent ventricular arrhythmias, causes:

• Residual ischemia
• LV dysfunction
• The presence of scar tissue

• Significant ventricular arrhythmias: 

mangement

• Treatment of LV dysfunction, residual ischemia
• Electrophysiological study
• Specific anti-arrhythmic therapy
• Implantable cardiovertor-defibrillator (ICD)


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Natural history & prognosis

• 25% of patients die within a few minutes
• 40% die within first month
• Early death is usually caused by arrhythmia
• Later on: the outcome is determined by the extent of 

myocardial damage


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Determinants of poor prognosis

• Poor LV function
• Arrhythmias
• Persistent AV block
• Anterior infarction > inferior infarction
• Old age
• Depression
• Social isolation




رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: Mubark Wilkins
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أو
عبر الحساب الاعتيادي
الرجاء كتابة البريد الالكتروني بشكل صحيح
الرجاء كتابة كلمة المرور
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