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2010 Integrated Updated Circulation ACLS Acute Coronary Syndromes Algorithm

1. EMS assesses and treats symptoms suggestive of ischemia or infarction, administering aspirin, oxygen, nitroglycerin, and morphine if needed. They obtain a 12-lead ECG and notify the hospital. 2. Upon arrival at the ED, vital signs are checked, IV access is established, a brief history and exam are performed, and initial tests are run within 10 minutes to determine the type of ACS. 3. The ECG is interpreted to determine if STEMI criteria are met, suggesting injury, or if ST depression or T-wave changes are suggestive of ischemia. This guides immediate reperfusion goals and treatment.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
483 views

2010 Integrated Updated Circulation ACLS Acute Coronary Syndromes Algorithm

1. EMS assesses and treats symptoms suggestive of ischemia or infarction, administering aspirin, oxygen, nitroglycerin, and morphine if needed. They obtain a 12-lead ECG and notify the hospital. 2. Upon arrival at the ED, vital signs are checked, IV access is established, a brief history and exam are performed, and initial tests are run within 10 minutes to determine the type of ACS. 3. The ECG is interpreted to determine if STEMI criteria are met, suggesting injury, or if ST depression or T-wave changes are suggestive of ischemia. This guides immediate reperfusion goals and treatment.

Uploaded by

ms_lezah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Acute Coronary Syndromes Algorithm2015 Update

Symptoms suggestive of ischemia or infarction


2
EMS assessment and care and hospital preparation:
Monitor,

support ABCs. Be prepared to provide CPR and defibrillation
Administer aspirin and consider oxygen, nitroglycerin, and morphine if needed
Obtain 12-lead ECG; if ST elevation:
Notify receiving hospital with transmission or interpretation; note time of
onset and first medical contact
Notified hospital should mobilize hospital resources to respond to STEMI
If considering prehospital fibrinolysis, use fibrinolytic checklist

3
Concurrent ED assessment (<10 minutes)
Check vital signs; evaluate oxygen saturation
Establish IV access
Perform brief, targeted history, physical exam
Review/complete fibrinolytic checklist;
check contraindications
Obtain initial cardiac marker levels,
initial electrolyte and coagulation studies
Obtain portable chest x-ray (<30 minutes)

Immediate ED general treatment


If O2 sat <90%, start oxygen at 4 L/min, titrate
Aspirin 160 to 325 mg (if not given by EMS)
Nitroglycerin sublingual or spray
Morphine IV if discomfort not relieved by
nitroglycerin

4
ECG interpretation

5
ST elevation or new or
presumably new LBBB;
strongly suspicious for injury
ST-elevation MI (STEMI)

ST depression or dynamic
T-wave inversion; strongly
suspicious for ischemia
High-risk nonST-elevation ACS
(NSTE-ACS)

11
Normal or nondiagnostic changes in
ST segment or T wave
Low-/intermediate-risk ACS

6
Start

adjunctive therapies
as indicated
Do not delay reperfusion

7
Time from onset of
symptoms 12 hours?

12 hours

Reperfusion goals:
Therapy defined by patient and
center criteria
Door-toballoon inflation
(PCI) goal of 90 minutes
Door-to-needle (fibrinolysis)
goal of 30 minutes
2015 American Heart Association

10

>12
hours

Troponin elevated or high-risk patient


Consider early invasive strategy if:
Refractory ischemic chest discomfort
Recurrent/persistent ST deviation
Ventricular tachycardia
Hemodynamic instability
Signs of heart failure
Start adjunctive therapies
(eg, nitroglycerin, heparin) as indicated

11

12
Consider admission to
ED chest pain unit or to
appropriate bed for
further monitoring and
possible intervention.

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