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100

What is a printzmetal angina 

no blockage but the coranaries are spasming and closing shut 

100

what medication is used to induce stress when unable to perform on a treadmill

dobutamine 

100

if my patient has chest pain unrelieved with nitrogylcerin and the ECG shows T wave inverted and/or ST dperession, and enzymes are positive what is this indicative of 

NSTEMI


Additional**

Type One NSTEMI = plaque rupture

Type Two NSTEMI = no blockage, O2 supply/demand problem --> Anemia, GI bleed

100

what do we do to the body's temperature during a CABG

we cause hypothermia to cool the body which cools the heart to reduce oxygen demand 

100

what medication may increase BNP in lab draw when first starting 

ARNI - entresto (valsartan/sacubitril) 

200

what happens with blood pressure in ACS

initially elevated BP due to the heart trying to compensate, then the BP drops due to a decrease in cardiac output

200

what does a positive ischemic change indicate during a stress test

area of heart during stress is not getting oxygen

200

what medication prevents ventricular remodeling and HF

decreased mortality

ACE-I

200

what do patients always have after chest surgery

atelectasis rt lungs not being inflated during the procedure

pulmonary rehab is extremely important to prevent pneumonia 

300

ST depression and T wave inversion = 

ST elevation = 

Q wave = 

ischemia

injury

infarction 

300

what does a left heart cath determine vs a right heart cath

left heart cath determines location and severity of blockages - arterial puncture (wrist or groin)

right heart cath measures pressures in right side of heart and lungs - venous puncture (groin) 

300

LAD - what is it 

widow maker

most often have blockages here

supplies anterior 2/3 of septum, anterior and apical L ventricle 

300

what are some complications of CABG

dysrhythmias - afib

cardiac tamponade (Beck's Triad and pulsus paradoxus)

pneumothorax (get chest tube) 

stroke 

ileus

400

how often are cardiac markers repeated after an MI 

every 6-8hours over 24 hours 

400

what test measures ejection fraction

ventriculogram 

400

What is a PCI

it is used to open up vessels in the cath lab

angioplasty is done by using a balloon inflation of the artery, then vacuum extraction of thrombus, then removal of plaque, then a stent is placed

400

what is the timeframe to get a patient to PCI with a STEMI

90 minutes 

500

when does troponin elevate, when does it peak and when does it return to baseline

2-4 hour elevates

10-12 hours peak

within 10 days return to baseline 

500

what is an important thing to remember about CT angiograms 

has to be timed exactly with respiratory cycle

requires just as much dye as a cardiac cath - not a great replacement 

500

what is the post PCI care

neuro checks rt CVA risk 

hemorrhage bleeding risk 

distal circulation

watch for pseudoaneurysm - blood leaks from injured artery and collects in surrounding tissue, forming a pulsaitle lump

monitor for restenosis 

bedrest for 4-8 hours with leg straight and HOB flat 

pressure bands if radial site was used, no mobility restrictions

nitrates and DAPT is used after

500

a patient has acute and sharp chest pain worse on inspiration, relieved by leaning forward, we hear friction rub over the lungs, they also present with tachycardia, high WBC and sed rate, mild fever

ECG shows mild ST elevation in all leads

what is the patient presenting with 

Pericarditis 


**Extra - pericarditis can cause cardiac tamponade (muffled heart sounds, hypotension, and JVD) 

** we would do a pericardiocentesis, tylenol, NSAIDs, steroids 

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