STEMI Diagnosis - Spotting the Enemy
- ECG within 10 minutes of first medical contact is critical.
- Diagnostic Criteria: ST-segment elevation in ≥2 contiguous leads.
- ≥1 mm in most leads.
- V2-V3: ≥2 mm (men ≥40), ≥2.5 mm (men <40), ≥1.5 mm (women).
- New or presumed new LBBB with ischemic symptoms is a STEMI equivalent.
- Cardiac Biomarkers: ↑ Troponin I or T (highly sensitive/specific).
⭐ Posterior Wall MI: Often missed! Look for ST depression in V1-V3 (reciprocal changes). Confirm with ST elevation in posterior leads (V7-V9).
Acute Management - First Response
- Immediate Actions: 12-lead ECG within 10 min, establish IV access, cardiac monitoring, O₂ if SpO2 <90%.
- Initial Medical Therapy:
- Aspirin 325 mg (chewed) & P2Y12 inhibitor (e.g., ticagrelor).
- Nitroglycerin (sublingual/IV). ⚠️ Caution in RV MI, hypotension, or severe aortic stenosis.
- Morphine for refractory chest pain.
- Anticoagulation (unfractionated heparin or LMWH).

⭐ The cornerstone of STEMI care is timely reperfusion. The target for primary PCI is a door-to-balloon time of < 90 minutes.
Reperfusion Therapy - Opening the Gates
Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) is the gold standard. The choice between PCI and fibrinolysis is critically time-dependent, aiming to restore coronary blood flow immediately.
- PCI (Angioplasty with Stent): Preferred strategy.
- Goal: First Medical Contact (FMC) to device time < 90 minutes in a PCI-capable hospital.
- If transfer needed, FMC-to-device < 120 minutes.
- Fibrinolysis (tPA, tenecteplase):
- Use if timely PCI is unavailable.
- Goal: Door-to-needle time < 30 minutes.
- ⚠️ Contraindicated in patients with prior intracranial hemorrhage or active bleeding.

⭐ All patients receiving fibrinolysis should be transferred to a PCI-capable center for routine angiography and potential intervention within 3-24 hours.
Post-MI Care - The Long Road Back
- Goal: Prevent reinfarction, manage complications, and improve long-term survival.
- Secondary Prevention Medications (Post-MI Cocktail):
- Dual Antiplatelet Therapy (DAPT): Aspirin (lifelong) + P2Y12 inhibitor (e.g., clopidogrel) for at least 12 months.
- Beta-Blockers: Continue for ≥3 years; lifelong if HF or LVEF <40%.
- High-Intensity Statins: Atorvastatin 80 mg or Rosuvastatin 40 mg for all.
- ACE Inhibitors / ARBs: Especially with anterior MI, HF, or LVEF <40%.
- Aldosterone Antagonists: (e.g., spironolactone) if LVEF <40% with HF symptoms or diabetes.
- Lifestyle is Key:
- Cardiac rehabilitation, smoking cessation, diet, exercise.
- Complication Watchlist:
- Arrhythmias: ↑VT/VF risk. Consider ICD if LVEF <35% after 40 days.
- Pericarditis: Early vs. late (Dressler's).
- Structural: Aneurysm, mural thrombus, rupture.
⭐ Dressler Syndrome: Autoimmune pericarditis occurring weeks to months post-MI. Presents with fever, pleuritic chest pain, and a friction rub. Treat with NSAIDs/colchicine.
- Classic symptom: Substernal chest pain radiating to the jaw/arm; be aware of atypical presentations (women, diabetics).
- ECG diagnosis: New ST-elevation (≥1 mm) in ≥2 contiguous leads or a new LBBB.
- Immediate reperfusion is critical: PCI within 90 minutes is the gold standard over thrombolysis.
- Use thrombolysis (tPA) only if PCI is unavailable within 120 minutes of first medical contact.
- For right ventricular (RV) infarcts, avoid nitrates/morphine and give IV fluids to maintain preload.
- Aspirin (162-325 mg) should be administered immediately to all patients with suspected ACS.
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