Chief Complain: Chest Pain
Unstable Patient
| Pivotal Assessments (One after the other) | Finding | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EKG
|
Ventricular Fibrillation
|
||||||||
| Portable Chest X-Ray |
Pleural Effusion |
Aortic Dissection
|
|||||||
| D-Dimer* | Elevated, Greater than .05 | < .05 | |||||||
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Yes, coronary angiography may be indicated even before troponin results are available if the electrocardiogram (ECG) shows certain high-risk changes consistent with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) or life-threatening ischemia.
ECG shows ST-elevation MI (STEMI):
ST elevation ≥1 mm in ≥2 contiguous leads
New or presumed new left bundle branch block (LBBB)
Posterior MI (ST depression in V1–V3 with tall R waves)
Patient is in cardiogenic shock, ongoing chest pain, or has ventricular arrhythmias.
Very high clinical suspicion of MI even without biomarker confirmation:
e.g., classic crushing chest pain, diaphoresis, hypotension, and high-risk history
STEMI is a clinical diagnosis based on ECG, not troponin.
Waiting for troponin delays life-saving reperfusion, which must be done within 90 minutes ("door-to-balloon time").
Troponins confirm diagnosis later but are not needed to initiate emergent PCI in STEMI.
| Scenario | Angiography Timing |
|---|---|
| STEMI on ECG | Immediate (don’t wait for troponin) |
| NSTEMI or unstable angina | After troponin and risk stratification |
| No ischemic ECG changes | Wait for troponin and clinical evaluation |
Would you like a decision algorithm for STEMI vs NSTEMI management?