Perioperative Cardiac Complications - Risk Radar On
- Goal: Identify & mitigate cardiac risk preoperatively.
- Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) components (1 point each):
- High-risk surgery (e.g., vascular, intraperitoneal, intrathoracic)
- Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD)
- Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)
- Cerebrovascular Disease (CVA)
- Insulin-dependent Diabetes Mellitus
- Serum Creatinine >2 mg/dL
- RCRI Score & MACE Risk: 0 pts ~0.4%; 1 pt ~0.9%; 2 pts ~6.6%; ≥3 pts ~11%.
- Functional Capacity: <4 METs (e.g., unable to climb 1 flight of stairs or walk 2 blocks) indicates ↑ risk.
- High risk (RCRI ≥2 or <4 METs) may need further evaluation (ECG, biomarkers, stress test) & optimization.
⭐ The Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) is a widely used tool to predict major adverse cardiac events (MACE); a score of ≥2 indicates elevated risk.
![Image placeholder: RCRI score components and MACE risk stratification]
Perioperative Cardiac Complications - Code Red Heart
- Perioperative Myocardial Infarction (PMI): Major risk.
- Type 1 MI: Plaque rupture.
- Type 2 MI: Supply-demand mismatch (common perioperatively).
- Diagnosis: ↑ Troponin (rise/fall, one value >99th percentile URL) + ≥1 of:
- Symptoms (often silent or atypical e.g., dyspnea, confusion).
- ECG: New ST depression >1mm; ST elevation (e.g., >1mm in 2 contiguous leads); new LBBB.
- Pathological Q waves.
- Imaging: New wall motion abnormality / loss of viable myocardium.
- Timing: Peaks 24-72h post-op.
- Other Complications:
- Arrhythmias (e.g., Atrial Fibrillation, Ventricular Tachycardia).
- Acute Heart Failure / Pulmonary Edema.
- Hemodynamic instability (hypotension/hypertension).

⭐ Most perioperative myocardial infarctions (PMIs) are Type 2 MIs, often occurring postoperatively (within 48-72 hours) and may be clinically silent (detected by routine troponin monitoring).
Perioperative Cardiac Complications - Beat Goes Wrong
- Arrhythmias:
- Most common: Atrial Fibrillation (AFib).
⭐ New-onset atrial fibrillation is the most common perioperative arrhythmia, often precipitated by surgical stress, pain, or electrolyte imbalance.
- Types: SVT, VT, bradyarrhythmias.
- Triggers: Stress, pain, hypoxia, electrolyte imbalance (K+, Mg++), ischemia.
- Rx: Correct cause. Rate control (β-blockers), rhythm control (amiodarone, cardioversion if unstable), anticoagulation.

- Most common: Atrial Fibrillation (AFib).
- Myocardial Ischemia/Infarction (MI):
- Risk: CAD, HTN, DM, LVEF <40%, age >65.
- Triggers: ↑O₂ demand (tachycardia) or ↓supply (hypotension, anemia).
- Dx: ECG (ST changes), ↑troponins.
- Rx: MONA-B (Morphine, Oxygen, Nitrates, Aspirin, β-blockers). Cardiology consult.
- Heart Failure (HF) / Pulmonary Edema:
- Causes: Fluid overload, MI, arrhythmias.
- Symptoms: Dyspnea, crackles, JVD, desaturation.
- Rx: LMNOP (Lasix, Morphine, Nitrates, Oxygen, Position-upright).
Perioperative Cardiac Complications - Guarding the Engine
- Risk Stratification: Utilize RCRI (Revised Cardiac Risk Index) to predict MACE. Key factors: high-risk surgery, ischemic heart disease, CHF, CVA, insulin-dependent DM, Cr >2 mg/dL.
- Preventative Strategies:
- Beta-blockers: Continue if already on. Cautious initiation for high-risk surgery if ≥3 RCRI factors.
- Statins: Indicated for vascular surgery patients.
- Aspirin: Continue for established CAD unless bleeding risk is prohibitive.
- Glycemic control: Target glucose <180 mg/dL.
- Intraoperative Management:
- Maintain hemodynamic stability: MAP >65 mmHg, avoid tachycardia/hypotension.
- Continuous ECG monitoring for ischemia (ST depression/elevation) and arrhythmias.
- Postoperative Care: Vigilant monitoring, pain control, DVT prophylaxis.
⭐ Perioperative beta-blocker therapy should be continued in patients already receiving it; cautious initiation may be considered in high-risk patients undergoing high-risk surgery, but not routinely.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Perioperative MI: leading cause of death; ECG changes (ST depression) & troponin rise are diagnostic.
- Major risk factors: IHD, CHF, DM, CKD, high-risk surgery.
- RCRI stratifies risk; >2 points = high risk.
- Continue beta-blockers; consider for high-risk patients.
- Avoid intraoperative hypotension & tachycardia to prevent cardiac events.
- Postoperative AF is common (esp. thoracic surgery); manage rate/rhythm.
- Demand ischemia (Type 2 MI) is more common perioperatively than Type 1 MI.
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