- ACS may occur with Marfan syndrome; Kawasaki disease; Takayasu arteritis; or cystic medial necrosis with aortic root dilatation, aneurysm formation, and dissection into the coronary artery.
- Anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery may occur as unexplained sudden death in a neonate.
- Coronary artery ostial stenosis may occur after repair of a transposition of the great arteries in the neonatal period.
- An aberrant left main coronary artery with its origin at the right sinus of Valsalva may cause ACS, especially with exertion.
- Traumatic myocardial infarction can occur in patients at any age.
- Accelerated atherosclerosis is known to occur in cardiac transplant recipients on immunosuppressive therapy.
- Progeria
Irrespective of the cause of unstable angina, the result of persistent ischemia is myocardial infarction (MI)
Mortality/Morbidity: When the only treatment for angina was nitroglycerin and limitation of activity, patients with newly diagnosed angina had a 40% incidence of MI and a 17% mortality rate within 3 months. A recent study shows that the 30-day mortality from ACS has decreased as treatment has improved, a statistically significant 47% relative decrease in 30-day mortality among newly diagnosed ACS from 1987-2000. This decrease in mortality is attributed to aspirin, glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa blockers, and coronary revascularization via medical intervention or procedures.
Clinical characteristics associated with a poor prognosis include advanced age, male sex, prior MI, diabetes, hypertension, and multiple-vessel or left-mainstem disease.
Sex: Incidence is higher in males among all patients younger than 70 years. This is due to the cardioprotective effect of estrogen in females. At 15 years postmenopause, the incidence of angina occurs with equal frequency in both sexes. Evidence exists that women more often have coronary events without typical symptoms, which might explain the frequent failure to initially diagnose ACS in women.
Age: ACS becomes progressively more common with increasing age. In persons aged 40-70 years, ACS is diagnosed more often in men than in women. In persons older than 70 years, men and women are affected equally.
- Typically, angina is a symptom of myocardial ischemia that appears in circumstances of increased oxygen demand. It usually is described as a sensation of chest pressure or heaviness that is reproduced by activities or conditions that increase myocardial oxygen demand.
- Not all patients experience chest pain. Some present with only neck, jaw, ear, arm, or epigastric discomfort.
- Other symptoms, such as shortness of breath or severe weakness, may represent anginal equivalents.
- A patient may present to the ED because of a change in pattern or severity of symptoms. A new case of angina is more difficult to diagnose because symptoms are often vague and similar to those caused by other conditions (eg, indigestion, anxiety).
- Patients may have no pain and may only complain of episodic shortness of breath, weakness, lightheadedness, diaphoresis, or nausea and vomiting.
- Elderly persons and those with diabetes may have particularly subtle presentations and may complain of fatigue, syncope, or weakness. Elderly persons may also present with only altered mental status. Those with preexisting altered mental status or dementia may have no recollection of recent symptoms and may have no complaints whatsoever.
- As many as half of cases of ACS are clinically silent in that they do not cause the classic symptoms described above and consequently go unrecognized by the patient. Maintain a high index of suspicion for ACS especially when evaluating women, diabetics, older patients, patients with dementia, and those with a history of heart failure.
