Friday 20 June 2014

Clinical Approach to Central Chest Pain

Clinical approach to “Central” Chest Pain

Clinical approach to “Central” Chest Pain

Differential diagnosis

  • Esophageal pain
    • Esophageal spasm
    • Esophageal reflux
  • Musculoskeletal pain
  • Anginal pain

History taking

  • Active process.
  • Direct questioning to check details and to confirm common understanding of the words.
  • Co-existing fundamentally different pain is also possible.

Characteristics of Angina “like” central chest pain

Site

  • Constant and characteristic for each patient (different for different patients).
  • Location is diffuse.
  • Not “inframammary”.

Character

  • Gripping/tight.
  • Not stabbing/sharp.

Severity

  • Unrelated to severity/duration of ischemia.
  • Silent ischemia: 50% of times.

Onset

  • Not abrupt.
  • Pain is either present or absent. It is not a background pain.

Duration and relief

  • Ischemia: 3-10 mins. Decreases with relaxation/rest/nitrates (Onset of action: 2-3 mins).
  • Infarction: pain > 30 mins. Any pain more than 30 mins without any subsequent evidence of myocardial infarction (Clinical, ECG, cardiac enzymes) - CARDIAC INVOLVEMENT UNLIKELY.

Initiation factor

  • Stable effort angina:

    • Atherosclerotic plaque (leading to fixed coronary artery narrowing)
      • At rest and upto certain limit of effort: normal blood supply distally.
      • After certain limit: blood supply to distal region impaired, “angina” develops.
    • Precipitated by: physical exertion, emotional stress, excessive meals, cold weather.
    • Stereotype events: Rest (asymptomatic) –> Exertion (asymptomatic) –> more exertion (angina) –> Rest (asymptomatic)
  • Unstable angina/acute myocardial infarction:

    • Plaque fissure
      • Thrombus –> intraluminal extension (Fixed component)
      • Chemical mediators –> VAsospasm (Dynamic component)
    • Stereotype is lost
      • Angina: unexpected occurence, increased frequency and duration.
    • Different cases have different proportion of:
      • THROMBUS ——— VASOSPASM (100% is called prinzmetal angina)
  • Symdrome X (Microvascular syndrome):

    • Indistinguishable from Stable Effort Angina.

Confirmation of diagnosis

  • Stress Angina:
    • Stress Testing: proves that chest pain is due to cardiac cause.
    • Angiography: diagnosis of cause as coronary block.
  • Unstable Angina:
    • Stress Testing: Potentially dangerous.
    • Continuous ECG monitoring.
  • Syndrome X:
    • Stress Testing: positive.
    • Angiography: negative.

Cardiac vs esophageal pain

  • Chest pain > 30 min and ECG normal: Unlikely to be cardiac.
  • Chest pain decreasing with antacids: Esophageal.
  • Chest pain increased with deglutition of saliva: Esophageal.
  • Chest pain associated with dysphagia: Esophageal.

May be indistinguishable

Cardiac vs muscular pain

  • Chest pain induced by movement of part: Muscular pain.

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