Management of acute coronary syndrome

Management of acute coronary syndrome
Acute coronary syndromes are commonly caused by a blood clot forming on an atherosclerotic plaque in a coronary artery. Oxygen delivery to a part of heart muscle is blocked, eventually causing cell death.
Specialtycardiology

Management of acute coronary syndrome is targeted against the effects of reduced blood flow to the affected area of the heart muscle, usually because of a blood clot in one of the coronary arteries, the vessels that supply oxygenated blood to the myocardium. This is achieved with urgent hospitalization and medical therapy, including drugs that relieve chest pain and reduce the size of the infarct, and drugs that inhibit clot formation; for a subset of patients invasive measures are also employed (coronary angiography and percutaneous coronary intervention). Basic principles of management are the same for all types of acute coronary syndrome. However, some important aspects of treatment depend on the presence or absence of elevation of the ST segment on the electrocardiogram, which classifies cases upon presentation to either ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) or non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome (NST-ACS); the latter includes unstable angina and non-ST elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI). Treatment is generally more aggressive for STEMI patients, and reperfusion therapy is more often reserved for them. Long-term therapy is necessary for prevention of recurrent events and complications.[1]

  1. ^ Current management of acute coronary syndrome is based on guidelines, produced by national and international medical societies according to the principles of evidence-based medicine. Examples are the guidelines of the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology (O'Gara 2013, Amsterdam 2014) and those of the European Society of Cardiology (Steg 2012, Hamm 2011).