Perioperative management of cardiac ischemia
From IDWiki
Background
Epidemiology
- Represents 1-6% of cardiac events
Etiology
- Bleeding (35%)
- Cardiac cause (44%), including MI, AV block, arrhythmias
- Other (21%), including PE, anaphylaxis, and hypoxemia
Pathophysiology
- Thrombosis
- Catecholamine surges from stress state
- Obstruction
- Infection or inflammation
- Increased demand, from tachycardia, fever, hypotension, anemia, and hypoxemia
Clinical Manifestations
- Highest risk period for MI is post-op day 3
- Myocardial infarction after non-cardiac surgery (MINS)
- STEMI is rare
Diagnosis
- Increased troponin with typical pattern
- Signs of ischemia, including Q waves on ECG or wall motion abnormalities on echocardiography
Management
- Treat underlying cause
- Add ASA and beta blocker, consider ACE inhibitor or nitrates
Preoperative assessment
- If surgery is emergent, proceed to OR
- If not emergent, then rule out ACS and treat this first
- If not having ACS, then risk stratify with AHA class or RCRI or NSQuIP
- Elective surgery should be delayed for:
- Anticoagulation/antiplatelets
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Infection, especially pneumonia
- Obstructions in the vasculature (ACS or PE within the past month)
- Unstable vitals
Prognosis
- 15-25% in-hospital mortality
- Outcomes are related to peak troponin (per VISION study)