Acute Coronary Syndrome for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)

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Study Tools For Acute Coronary Syndrome for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)

Acute Coronary Syndromes (Image)
Angina (Cheatsheet)
Angina Pectoris (Image)
Unstable Angina (Picmonic)
Stable Angina (Picmonic)

Outline

Acute Coronary Syndrome

Definition/Etiology:

Acute Coronary Syndrome
Chest pain caused by decreased oxygen supply to the heart (myocardial ischemia)

Acronyms:
ACS – acute coronary syndrome
AMI – acute myocardial infarction = heart attack
N-STEMI – non-ST elevation myocardial infarction
STEMI – ST elevation myocardial infarction
SOB – shortness of breath
MONA – morphine, oxygen, nitroglycerin, aspirin

 

Pathophysiology:

Acute Coronary Syndrome
(How, why)

Word Play:
Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) – think coronary artery
Coronary artery – blood supply of heart muscle
Syndrome = symptoms

Four stages:

SUNS
Short, Unrelieved, Not okay, Severe
Stable angina, Unstable angina, N-STEMI, STEMI

Highway – on the way to an important test
Stable angina – cone in the middle of the road
Unstable angina – lane closure
N-STEMI – accident intermittent closure
STEMI – highway closed (bypass – see alternate route)

 

Clinical Presentation:

Stable angina – chest pain upon exertion, short lived, relieved by rest or meds

 

Unstable angina – chest pain occurs at any time, unrelieved by rest or meds, negative troponin, maybe ST depression

 

ST depression = ischemia (not enough oxygen)

 

N-STEMI – AMI ischemic chest pain, intermittent coronary occlusion/blockage, no ST elevation (maybe ST depression), positive troponin, admission pt not okay

 

STEMI – AMI, obstructed coronary artery with thrombosis, ST elevation, positive troponin, immediate intervention = severe and life threatening

AMI

Chest pain or discomfort (burning, crushing, tightness, pressure, and aching)

Radiation – arm, neck, jawline, back, or shoulder

Other – nausea/vomiting, “indigestion,” SOB, diaphoresis, dizziness, syncope, palpitations, tachycardia, bradycardia

 

Collaborative Management:

  • 12-lead ECG
  • Treat chest discomfort
  • Continuous monitoring
  • Cardiac enzymes – troponin, CK-MB
  • Chest x-ray and labs
  • Pharm management – MONA
  • STEMI
    • Reperfusion! Reperfusion! Reperfusion!
    • Gold standard – PCI <90 minutes
    • Fibrinolytics – “who’ya gunna call; clot busters”
    • Post – beta-blockers, ace inhibitors, ARB if no ACE inhibitors

 

Evaluation | Patient Monitoring | Education:

Keep on monitor. Frequent BPs. Enough IVs in case of arrest? Watch out for changes (EKG, LOC, etc.). SAFETY – even in ER.

 

Linchpins: (Key Points)

Decreased oxygen supply

SUNS
Short, Unrelieved, Not okay, Severe
Stable angina, Unstable angina, N-STEMI, STEMI

Highway – on the way to an important test

Stable angina – cone in the middle of the road
Unstable angina – lane closure
N-STEMI – accident intermittent closure
STEMI – highway closed (bypass – see alternate route)

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Transcript

For more great CEN prep, got to the link below to purchase the “Emergency Nursing Examination Review” book by Dr. Laura Gasparis Vonfrolio RN, PHD
https://greatnurses.com/

References:

  • Nelson, N. (2017). Cardiovascular Emergencies. In CEN
  • Online Review. Emergency Nurses Association.

View the FULL Transcript

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