Angina Pectoris – Clinical Approach to Chest Pain & Acute Coronary Syndrome

Chest pain is one of the most frequent and critical complaints in emergency and outpatient settings. Among its many causes, angina pectoris—a manifestation of coronary artery disease (CAD)—requires urgent evaluation to rule out myocardial infarction and prevent sudden cardiac death.

This post outlines a practical approach to stable and unstable angina, including classification, diagnosis, emergency management, and risk stratification.


🔍 What Is Angina?

Angina pectoris is chest discomfort caused by myocardial ischemia, typically due to reduced coronary blood flow.

✅ Classification of Chest Pain:

TypeCharacteristics
Typical Angina1. Substernal chest pressure/crushing pain
2. Provoked by exertion/stress
3. Relieved by rest or nitroglycerin
Atypical AnginaMeets 2 out of 3 classical angina features
Non-anginal PainMeets 1 or none of the typical angina characteristics

📌 Atypical Presentations

  • Decubitus Angina – Occurs when lying flat, relieved upon sitting
  • Warm-up Angina – Begins with exertion but improves with continued activity

🛑 Initial Evaluation in Emergency

High suspicion is crucial. Always start with:

  • Focused history & physical exam
  • Vital signs
  • ECG (ASAP)
  • Cardiac enzymes (Troponin, CK-MB)
  • Chest X-ray

Stabilize hemodynamics if the patient is hypotensive, bradycardic, or in distress.


💊 Initial Medical Management

MedicationPurpose
Aspirin (325 mg)Immediate mortality reduction, inhibits platelet aggregation
Sublingual NitroglycerinRelieves pain by venodilation (⚠️ Avoid in hypotension or bradycardia)
OxygenFor hypoxic patients (<90% saturation)

⚠️ Check for Aortic Dissection Before Aspirin

  • Measure blood pressure in both arms
  • Large discrepancy = suspect aortic dissectionavoid aspirin

📉 ECG Interpretation

ST-Segment Elevation

  • Indicates STEMI
  • Immediate initiation of reperfusion therapy required

ST Depression / T-wave Inversion

  • Suggests NSTEMI or unstable angina

Normal ECG

  • Still doesn’t rule out ischemia; cardiac enzymes are essential

🧪 Cardiac Enzymes

MarkerTime to RiseDurationUtility
Troponin I/T4–6 hrs7–14 daysMost specific & sensitive for MI diagnosis
CK-MB3–6 hrs2–3 daysBest for reinfarction detection within a week

🧬 Interpreting the Results

ECG FindingsEnzyme StatusLikely Diagnosis
ST ElevationElevatedSTEMI
ST Depression/Other ChangesElevatedNSTEMI
ST Depression/Normal ECGNormalUnstable Angina
Normal ECG + Normal EnzymesConsider non-cardiac causes (e.g. GI, pulmonary)

🧪 Further Testing if Initial Workup is Inconclusive

Stress Testing

Used when angina is suspected but resting ECG and enzymes are non-diagnostic.

  • Exercise ECG – If patient can exercise and baseline ECG is normal
  • Stress Echo/Nuclear Imaging – If baseline ECG is abnormal
  • Pharmacologic Stress Test – If unable to exercise (e.g. Dobutamine, Dipyridamole)

Positive Stress Test → Proceed to Coronary Angiography


🫀 Coronary Angiography

The gold standard to identify:

  • Location and severity of stenosis
  • Number of vessels involved
  • Eligibility for PCI or CABG

Indications for CABG:

  • Left main coronary artery disease
  • Triple vessel disease

🧠 Summary Flowchart

plaintextCopyEditChest Pain ➝ ECG + Troponin + CXR
          ↓
If ST-Elevation → STEMI → Reperfusion
If ST-Depression + ↑Troponin → NSTEMI
If Normal ECG + ↑Troponin → NSTEMI
If Normal ECG + Normal Troponin + High Suspicion → Stress Test
If Stress Test Positive → Angiography → PCI/CABG
If CXR Positive → Non-cardiac cause

🧪 Key Learning Points

  • Always suspect cardiac origin first in chest pain
  • Aspirin saves lives if not contraindicated
  • Normal ECG ≠ No cardiac disease
  • Troponins are the most specific early markers
  • CK-MB helps detect reinfarction
  • Stress testing is the bridge between clinical suspicion and angiography

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