Management and Determining the Cause

Chief Complaint: Chest Pain

Identify Life-Threatening Symptoms

  • Crushing, pressure-like chest pain radiating to arm, jaw, back
  • Diaphoresis, dyspnea, nausea
  • Syncope or near-syncope
  • Tachycardic, bradycardic,
  • Increased respiratory rate, decreased respiratory rate,
  • Altered mental status
  • Hypotension or shock
  • Unequal pulses or BP in both arms
  • Sudden tearing pain radiating to back
  • Hemoptysis or acute dyspnea after immobilization

If any are present,

Establish Airway

Establish Breathing

Establish Circulation

Determine the Cause


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Monitor Patient

  • Oxygen saturation, pulse, BP, temperature, ECG monitoring and IV access

 


STEP 2. Determine Pain Characteristics

Parameter Typical Findings Possible Causes
Onset Sudden MI, PE, pneumothorax, aortic dissection
Gradual Angina, pericarditis, esophagitis
Character Pressure, squeezing Angina, MI
Sharp, stabbing Pericarditis, pleurisy, musculoskeletal
Location Substernal Cardiac, esophageal
Lateral chest Pulmonary, musculoskeletal
Radiation Left arm, jaw Cardiac
Back Aortic dissection, esophageal
Duration <15 min Angina
>30 min MI, dissection, PE
Relieved/Worsened by Rest or nitroglycerin → angina; movement/palpation → musculoskeletal; leaning forward → pericarditis; swallowing → esophageal
Associated symptoms Dyspnea (PE, MI), nausea (MI), cough/fever (pneumonia), palpitations (arrhythmia)

STEP 3. Initial Diagnostic Workup

  1. ECG (12-lead)

    • ST elevation/depression → MI or ischemia

    • Diffuse ST elevation with PR depression → pericarditis

    • Sinus tachycardia → nonspecific (PE, anxiety, etc.)

  2. Cardiac enzymes (Troponin I/T, CK-MB)

    • Elevated → myocardial infarction or myocarditis

  3. Chest X-ray

    • Pneumonia, pneumothorax, aortic dissection, cardiomegaly, mediastinal widening

  4. Other tests as indicated

    • D-dimer / CT pulmonary angiography → suspected PE

    • Echocardiography → pericardial effusion, wall motion

    • Esophagram / endoscopy → GI source

    • Musculoskeletal exam → tenderness or reproduction of pain


STEP 4. Categorize Cause by System

Category Common Diagnoses Key Clues
Cardiac Angina, MI, pericarditis, myocarditis Pressure, radiation, ECG/troponin changes
Pulmonary PE, pneumonia, pneumothorax, pleurisy Dyspnea, pleuritic pain, abnormal CXR
Aortic Aortic dissection Sudden tearing pain, pulse deficit, widened mediastinum
GI GERD, esophageal spasm, peptic ulcer Burning pain, after meals, relieved by antacids
Musculoskeletal Costochondritis, trauma Reproducible with palpation or movement
Psychogenic Anxiety, panic attack Normal ECG/CXR, hyperventilation, tingling, sweating

STEP 5. Management Path

Findings Action
ECG changes or elevated troponin Admit → ACS protocol
Pleuritic pain with abnormal CXR or D-dimer Work up for PE or pneumonia
Reproducible tenderness, normal ECG & CXR Musculoskeletal pain → NSAIDs, rest
Heartburn-like pain, relieved by antacid GERD → PPI/H2 blocker
Unclear diagnosis Consider stress test, echo, or CT angiography

Mnemonic for Major Life-Threatening Causes

“PAMPE”

  • P: Pulmonary embolism

  • A: Acute coronary syndrome (MI/angina)

  • M: Myocarditis/pericarditis

  • P: Pneumothorax

  • E: Esophageal rupture (Boerhaave’s syndrome)

  • Aortic dissection (often added as “PAAMPED”)


Would you like me to generate a flowchart diagram (visual algorithm) for this chest pain workup? It can be used for teaching or clinical documentation.

 

 

Chest Pain

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