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Acute Coronary Syndrom - Coggle Diagram
Acute Coronary Syndrom
pathophysiology
plaque formation that is not limited and forms in narrow arteries. Plaque is caused by a buildup of fat that eventually sticks to the artery walls.
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signs and symptoms
Faint or very painful pain in the chest, neck, left shoulder, arm, and spread (especially in the left arm). The pain occurs slowly or suddenly, spreading.
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definition and etiology
definition
a condition where there is acute myocardial ischemia/ infarction, which occurs due to a sudden decrease in coronary blood flow.
etiology
Severe narrowing of the coronary artery lumen caused by progressive atherosclerotic formation or post-interventional percutaneous coronary restenosis.
Inflammation. Unstable angina pectoris secondary to increased oxygen demand or decreased oxygen supply (tachycardia, fever, hypotension or anemia).
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classification
Myocardial infarction with non ST segment elevation (NSTEMI: non ST segment elevation myocardial infarction)
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CMD
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history
retrosternal pain radiating to the left arm, neck, interscapular area, shoulder or epigastrium