본문 바로가기

_Medical Life

[Quick info] Things to order/do for chest pain (angina) patients

Get a good history

  • LQRST SARAS
    • Location of pain
    • Quality of pain
    • Does pain radiate or move anywhere (to left arm or back)
    • Severity of pain (0-10 scale)
    • Timing of pain -frequency, when it first started, how long it lasts, how is it from the beginning vs now
    • Setting -what was the patient doing when they first had the pain
    • Aggravating activities
    • Relieving activities or things (medications)
    • Associated symptoms (seen below)
    • Similar symptoms in the past
      • Chest pain with activity vs without activity
      • Leg pain
      • Shortness of breath, palpitations felt, nausea/vomiting, recent illnesses.
  • Heart disease history
    • Any valve replacements, stents or CABG done, any heart catheterizations they had done in the past
    • Smoking history, drug history, alcohol usage
    • Hypertension (high blood pressure), arrhythmia diseases, high cholesterol, CHF ect
    • family history of any heart disease
  • Cardiologist (heart doctor) they see
  • Check vital signs- make sure they are stable – (blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate)
    • If unstable -> catheterization lab
    • Nitroglycerin for chest pain
  • Get troponin (heart enzyme) levels and see the trend of the levels either increasing or decreasing (but troponin levels can increase for a variety of reasons, not only because of a heart attack)
  • Get Echo
  • Get chest x-ray
  • Then- if they are able, do stress test -> if they are having pulmonary or lung symptoms, typically this gets held until their pulmonary symptoms calm down.
  • One thing: if there is pain with palpation on the chest area, most likely NOT a myocardial infarction (heart attack)
    • You don’t normally feel chest pain or pressure from a heart attack when someone physically is pressing on your chest or arm.