Cardiovascular Evaluation

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Cardiac Risk Assessment - Heart Checkup Time

  • Goal: Identify patients at ↑ risk of perioperative Major Adverse Cardiac Events (MACE: MI, HF, CVA, death).
  • Key Components:
    • Clinical History: Prior MI, HF, angina, arrhythmia, valvular disease.
    • Functional Capacity: Metabolic Equivalents (METs).
      • <4 METs (e.g., can't climb 1 flight of stairs) = Poor capacity, ↑ risk.
      • 4-10 METs = Moderate.

      • 10 METs = Excellent.

  • Risk Stratification Tools:
    • Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) - 6 predictors (1 point each):
      • High-risk surgery
      • Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD)
      • Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)
      • History of Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA/TIA)
      • Insulin-dependent Diabetes Mellitus
      • Preoperative serum Creatinine >2 mg/dL
    • NSQIP MICA, Gupta MICA.

⭐ Functional capacity (METs) is a cornerstone of cardiac risk assessment; inability to perform activities ≥4 METs significantly increases perioperative cardiac risk.

METs for daily activities

Functional Capacity & METs - Stairway to Surgery

  • METs (Metabolic Equivalents): Measure of exercise capacity. $1 \text{ MET} = \text{resting oxygen consumption} \approx 3.5 \text{ mL O}_2\text{/kg/min}$.
  • Crucial for assessing perioperative risk; quantifies physiological reserve.
  • Key MET Levels & Activities:
    • <4 METs (Poor): Self-care (e.g., eating, dressing), walking indoors, walking 1-2 blocks slowly. Associated with ↑ risk.
    • 4-10 METs (Moderate/Good): Climbing 1-2 flights of stairs (📌 1 flight $\approx$ 4 METs), running a short distance, heavy housework (e.g., scrubbing floors), moderate recreational activities (e.g., golf, dancing).
    • >10 METs (Excellent): Strenuous sports (e.g., swimming, singles tennis, football). Associated with ↓ risk. METs Associated With Different Activities

⭐ Patients unable to achieve 4 METs of activity (e.g., cannot climb one flight of stairs or walk 4 blocks on level ground) have a significantly increased risk of postoperative cardiopulmonary complications, including MACE (Major Adverse Cardiac Events).

Key Cardiac Conditions - Red Flag Hearts

  • Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD):
    • ⚠️ Recent MI (<1 month)/ACS: Postpone elective surgery. Very high risk.
    • Unstable Angina: Absolute contraindication for elective surgery.
    • PCI Stenting: Delay surgery (BMS: >30 days; DES: >6-12 months). Maintain DAPT.
  • Heart Failure (HF):
    • ⚠️ Decompensated HF (NYHA Class IV): Postpone. Optimize first.
    • Severe LV dysfunction (LVEF <35%): ↑ perioperative risk.
  • Valvular Heart Disease (VHD):
    • ⚠️ Severe Aortic Stenosis: AVA <$1.0 \text{ cm}^2$, mean gradient >40 mmHg. Symptomatic AS = very high risk.
    • Symptomatic Severe Mitral Stenosis: High risk; optimize/intervene.
  • Arrhythmias & Conduction Defects:
    • High-grade AV block (Mobitz II, 3rd degree).
    • Symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias / sustained VT.
    • SVT with uncontrolled ventricular rate (>100 bpm at rest).
    • Pacemaker/ICD: Preoperative interrogation & management plan.

⭐ Critical Aortic Stenosis (symptomatic, or AVA <$1.0 \text{ cm}^2$ with mean gradient >40 mmHg) is a major predictor of perioperative cardiac MACE.

Investigations & Management - Test & Treat Plan

  • ECG: All patients. Note Q, LVH, ST-TΔ, rhythm.
  • Echocardiography: HF Sx, valvular dz, LVEF <40%.
  • Stress Test (TMT/DSE): Poor METs (<4) & RCRI ≥1 for high/int-risk surgery.
  • Management Strategy:
    • β-blockers: Continue. Start if ≥3 RCRI/CAD (vascular surg). HR 55-70 bpm.

      ⭐ Start days-weeks pre-op, not acutely.

    • Statins: Continue. Start: vascular surgery/CAD.
    • Aspirin: 2° prevention (stents): continue. Primary: stop 7d.
    • DAPT: BMS: delay 4-6w. DES: delay 6-12m. Urgent: ASA on.
    • Anticoagulants: Warfarin: stop 5d (INR <1.5), bridge high risk. NOACs: stop 1-5d.
    • Revascularization: Standard indications only.

Preoperative Cardiac Risk Management Algorithm

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • RCRI predicts MACE; assess for all surgical patients.
  • <4 METs signifies poor functional capacity and ↑ cardiac risk.
  • Active cardiac conditions (e.g., unstable angina, recent MI, severe valve disease, decompensated HF) need pre-op optimization.
  • Continue beta-blockers if on them; consider for high-risk (≥3 RCRI) or known CAD.
  • Continue aspirin for secondary prevention (stents/CAD); balance risks.
  • DAPT duration post-stent dictates elective surgery timing.
  • Severe symptomatic aortic stenosis is high-risk; consider pre-op intervention.

Practice Questions: Cardiovascular Evaluation

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 40-year-old male patient presents to the Emergency department with central chest pain for 2 hours. The ECG shows ST segment depression and cardiac troponins are elevated. The patient has a positive history of previous PCI 3 months back. He is administered Aspirin, Clopidogrel, Nitrates, and LMWH in the Emergency Department and shifted to the coronary care unit. What is the best recommended course of further action?

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Flashcards: Cardiovascular Evaluation

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A patient with poorly controlled DM/HTN would be classified under ASA _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

A patient with poorly controlled DM/HTN would be classified under ASA _____

III

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