Anatomy & Physiology
Coronary Path
Pharmacology
Nursing Judgment & Safety
Diagnostics & Labs
100

This heart chamber generates the pressure required to perfuse the coronary arteries during diastole.

What is the left ventricle? 

100

This lipid particle is the primary contributor to fatty streak formation in atherosclerosis.

What is LDL?

100

This medication class decreases preload and myocardial oxygen demand via nitric oxide.

What are nitrates?

100

This medication must be held before IV contrast administration to prevent lactic acidosis.

What is metformin?

100

This lab is the most sensitive and specific marker of myocardial injury.

What is troponin?

200

These arteries receive the majority of their blood flow during ventricular relaxation rather than contraction.

What are the coronary arteries?

200

Angina caused by coronary vasospasm rather than plaque rupture falls into this category.

What is Prinzmetal (variant) angina?

200

These drugs reduce heart rate and contractility by blocking sympathetic stimulation.

What are beta-blockers?

200

Patients should call 911 if chest pain persists after this many nitroglycerin doses.

What is one dose?

200

This hormone is released in response to ventricular stretch in heart failure.  

What is BNP?

300

This structure prevents oxygenated and deoxygenated blood from mixing and can be atrial or ventricular.

What is the septum?

300

Plaque rupture with partial vessel occlusion most commonly leads to this ACS subtype.

What is NSTEMI?

300

Combining nitrates with this medication class can cause life-threatening hypotension.

What are PDE-5 inhibitors?

300

This complication may occur if beta-blockers are abruptly discontinued.

What is rebound hypertension?

300

This diagnostic test evaluates ejection fraction and valve function in real time.

What is echocardiography?

400

A decrease in this measurement directly leads to reduced tissue perfusion and pulmonary congestion.

What is ejection fraction?

400

Prolonged ischemia results in irreversible myocardial damage known as this.

What is infarction (necrosis)?

400

This calcium channel blocker subtype primarily affects the SA and AV nodes.

What are non-dihydropyridine CCBs?

400

This vessel is commonly used as a graft during CABG surgery.

What is the saphenous vein or internal mammary artery?

400

Elevated levels of this lab may rule out MI but cannot diagnose it.

What is myoglobin?

500

This phase of the cardiac cycle allows the coronary arteries to receive the majority of their blood flow.

What is diastole?

500

This change in a coronary artery most directly reduces myocardial oxygen supply and causes angina.

What is arterial narrowing from atherosclerosis?

500

This medication dissolves fibrin clots by converting plasminogen into plasmin and is used in acute STEMI when PCI is not immediately available.

What is tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)?

500

 Which nursing action is most appropriate when a patient with suspected acute coronary syndrome arrives in the emergency department?

What is obtaining a 12-lead ECG as soon as possible?

500

This lab value rises with systemic inflammation and is non-specific to myocardial damage.

What is C-reactive protein (CRP)?