Angina and drugs

?
View mindmap
  • Stable angina and drugs
    • Myocardium is only perfused with oxygenated blood during diastole
      • Oxygen demand is a function of heart rate and ventricular wall tension (pressure, volume, thickness)
      • Coronary blood flow: 225ml/min - Exercise: 800+ml/min
    • Arterial stiffness: normal blood flow relies on vessels elasticity expanding after pulsatile ejections
      • Age and risk factors make walls less elastic, increasing cardiac inotropy to compensate
        • Leading to ventricular hypertrophy and increased myocardial oxygen demand
          • Heart has to work harder against increased load due to stiffened vessel: increase muscle: needs more oxygen
      • Atherosclerosis: growth of LDL-cholesterol plaque in sub-endothelium
        • Leads to tissue ischaemia: oxygenated blood can't meet myocardial demand
          • Large quantities of lactate are generated from pyruvate formed by myocardial anaerobic glycolysis
            • Lactate can trigger pain > angina is due to large quantities / ischaemia
    • Stable angina: chest pain (crushing, burning, tight) (down left arm) with SOB, nausea, sweating
      • Symptoms precipitated by exertion and stress
      • ST depression on 12-lead ECG during exercise stress test (asymptomatic) : ischaemia
        • Coronary angiography: identify narrowing / occlusion > dye injected via catheter in femoral artery
    • Acute coronary syndrome
      • Symptoms appear at rest, indicate unstable plaque rupture with thrombus fragments narrowing vessels
    • Drugs
      • Reduce symptoms during episode: GTN
        • Organic nitrates reduced in body to NO
          • NO activates guanylyl cyclase in SM cells > cGMP activates PKG > PKG prevents Ca entry into cells > dilation of vessels > reduces symptoms
      • Prophylactic: bisoprolol
        • B1-adrenoceptor antagonist: reduce onset of episodes
          • Block B1AR's in cardiac tissue, adrenaline cannot bind
            • Negative chronotropy and inotropy: reduce cardiac output / oxygen demand
  • Other drugs
    • CCBs: impede Ca traffic through L-type VGIC's
      • Intracellular face of calcium channel blocked > prevent contraction > vasodilation
      • Also reduce force of contraction and rate limit heart: decrease CO
      • E.g Verapamil
    • Nicorandil
      • Vasodilator: increases cGMP reducing Ca entry
      • Activates K/ATP channel, cells hyperpolarise > prevent calcium channel activity
    • Ivabradine
      • Rate limiter: inhibits Na/K current in SAN, reducing pacemaker automacity
    • Statins (not used in angina treatment)
      • Inhibit HMG CoA reductase (required for cholesterol synthesis)
        • Reduces CAD risk

Comments

No comments have yet been made

Similar Medicine resources:

See all Medicine resources »See all Drugs resources »