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Exam (elaborations)

ACNP Diagnosis & Management Exam 1: Q’s And A’s

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  • ACNP
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  • ACNP

ACNP Diagnosis & Management Exam 1: Q’s And A’s

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  • November 2, 2024
  • 22
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • ACNP
  • ACNP
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LeCrae
ACNP Diagnosis & Management Exam 1: Q’s And A’s

Lectures Covered:
1. Ischemic Heart Disease
2. Hypertension
3. Pericarditis
4. Heart Failure+APE
Ischemic Heart Disease Right Ans - Myocardial O2 demand > Myocardial
O2 supply --> spectrum of clinical syndromes

Results in myocardial hypoxia and accumulation of waste metabolites

Most common cause: atherosclerotic disease of coronary arteries
-reduction in coronary blood flow
-inadequate perfusion of region of myocardium supplied by affected artery

Risk Factors for CAD Right Ans - Obesity
Sedentary lifestyle
DM/insulin resistance
High LDL
Low HDL
smoking

Each of these cause a disturbance of normal functions of vascular endothelium
(maintenance of antithrombotic surface, control of vascular tone - blood
supply, control of inflammatory cell adhesion)

Angina Pectoris Right Ans - chest discomfort produced by myocardial
ischemia - 2 types

Stable Angina Right Ans - Chronic pattern of transient angina pectoris,
precipitated by physical activity or emotional upset

Relieved by rest within a few minutes; pain follows a predictable pattern

Episodes often associated with temporary ST depression, but no permanent
myocardial damage *EKG changes return to normal!*

,Unstable Angina Right Ans - Pattern of increased frequency and duration of
angina episodes, sometimes at rest; risk of progression to MI if untreated

Pain is NOT relieved by rest or nitroglycerin!

Cardiac biomarkers (troponin, CK) are normal!

Myocardial Infarction Right Ans - Prolonged cessation of blood supply
leads to region of myocardial necrosis

Most often results from acute thrombus at site of coronary atherosclerotic
stenosis

Atherosclerotic Plaques Right Ans - Develop at sites of fatty streaks, where
there are accumulations of foam cells

Soft vs. hard plaques --> ratio of foam cells to fibrous tissue

Softer plaques may be more likely to rupture (because of the higher number
of foam cells!!!)

Acute Coronary Syndrome Right Ans - A spectrum of disease including:

-unstable angina
-NSTEMI
-STEMI

NSTEMI Right Ans - Clinical feature of unstable angina PLUS:

-evidence of myocardial necrosis, as indicated by cardiac biomarkers
-may have some EKG changes --> ST segment depression, T wave inversions
-but, NO ST SEGMENT ELEVATION

Creatinine Kinase (CK) Right Ans - Non-specific for cardiac injury, rises 4-8
hours after insult and returns to normal in 48-72h

(Elevates with cardiac and other muscle damage)

Rises faster than Troponin!

, Troponin I Right Ans - *Very specific for cardiac injury*, but can also be
elevated in PE, SIRS, HF, ESRD,

Takes longer than CK to rise --> do 2-3 sets over 6-12h if first test is negative

May stay elevated for 1-2 wks following MI.

NSTEMI Treatment Right Ans - Continuous EKG monitoring--> watch for
progression to STEMI

Nitrates --> paste or SL, IV gtt if pain persists after 3 doses (be sure to ask
about phosphodiesterase inhibitor use, warn about HA associated w/ nitrates,
monitor BP for drop)

Beta-blockers --> target HR of 50-60 bpm (ask about cocain use

ASA 325 mg --> chewed, non-enteric coated

Heparin --> unfractionated

Early invasive strategy vs. conservative --> cardiac cath/stent vs. lifestyle
modifications

ACE Inhibitor when stable for pt with HTN, HF, DM --> this is not for the tx of
HTN is for the prevention of L ventricular modeling!

STEMI Right Ans - Chest pain is the most common presenting complaint
(pressure, squeezing, crushing)

Associated diaphoresis strongly suggestive

Total occlusion of an epicardial coronary artery produces ST-segment
elevation on EKG (>1 mm in 3 contiguous leads!)

Cardiac biomarkers elevated --> may not be elevated immediately following
injury!!

-1/4 of pt have signs of sympathetic hyperactivity (tachycardia, high BP)

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