Clinical meaning
ACS Management involves specific alterations in acs management physiology. The pathophysiology of ACS Management encompasses changes in myocardial contractility, cardiac conduction, vascular resistance, endothelial function, or structural integrity depending on the primary mechanism involved. Key cellular processes include ion channel dysfunction, inflammatory mediator activation, oxidative stress, fibrotic remodeling, and neurohormonal dysregulation that drive the clinical manifestations of acs management.
Diagnosis & workup
Diagnostics & workup: - Echocardiography: EF, wall motion, valvular function, chamber dimensions - TEE for valvular vegetation, intracardiac thrombus, PFO assessment - Cardiac MRI for tissue characterization (edema, fibrosis, infiltration) - Stress testing (exercise or pharmacologic) with nuclear or echo imaging - HbA1c for glycemic control assessment in diabetic patients - Coagulation studies: PT/INR, aPTT, D-dimer - Thyroid function tests (hyperthyroidism causes high-output states)
Risk factors: - Age >65 with cardiovascular degeneration - Peripheral artery disease (ABI <0.9) - Chronic kidney disease (eGFR <60 mL/min) - Atrial fibrillation or flutter with rapid ventricular rate - History of preeclampsia or gestational hypertension - Heavy alcohol use (>14 drinks/week males, >7 females) - Cocaine or amphetamine use causing coronary vasospasm