| Literature DB >> 26559979 |
Luiz Antonio Machado César1, Antonio de Pádua Mansur1, João Fernando Monteiro Ferreira1.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26559979 PMCID: PMC4632996 DOI: 10.5935/abc.20150136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arq Bras Cardiol ISSN: 0066-782X Impact factor: 2.000
Pre-test probability of coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients by age and sex (Diamond/Forrester e CASS Data)
| Age (years) | Nonanginal chest pain | Atypical angina | Typical angina | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | Male | Female | Male | Female | |
| 35 | 3-35 | 1-19 | 8-59 | 2-39 | 30-88 | 10-78 |
| 45 | 9-47 | 2-22 | 21-70 | 5-43 | 51-92 | 20-79 |
| 55 | 23-59 | 4-25 | 25-79 | 10-47 | 80-95 | 38-82 |
| 65 | 49-69 | 9-29 | 71-86 | 20-51 | 93-97 | 56-84 |
Canadian Cardiovascular Society grading of angina pectoris
| Class I | Habitual physical activity, such as walking and climbing sairs, does not cause angina. Angina occurs during prolonged or strenuous physical activity. |
| Class II | Slight limitation for habitual activities. Angina during walking or climbing stairs rapidly, walking uphill, walking or climbing stairs after meals or in the cold, in the wind or under emotional stress, or within a few hours after waking up. Angina occurs after walking two blocks or climbing more than 1 flight of stairs in normal conditions. |
| Class III | Limitation of habitual activities. Angina occurs after walking one block or climbing 1 flight of stairs. |
| Class IV | Unable to carry on any habitual physical without discomfort. Angina symptoms may be present at rest. |
Recommendations for coronary angiography in patients with coronary artery disease
| Class I | Stable angina (CCS III or IV) despite clinical treatment (B) |
| High risk in noninvasive tests, regardless of angina (B) | |
| Angina and cardiac arrest or severe ventricular arrhythmia survivors (B) | |
| Angina and symptoms/signs of congestive heart failure (C) | |
| Class IIa | Patients with uncertain diagnosis after noninvasive tests, when the benefits of an accurate diagnosis outweigh the risks and costs of coronary angiography (C) |
| Unable to undergo noninvasive tests due to physical disability, illness, or obesity (C) | |
| High-risk jobs that require an accurate diagnosis (C) | |
| Patients with uncertain prognostic information after noninvasive tests (C) | |
| Class IIb | Multiple hospitalizations for chest pain, when a definitive diagnosis is considered necessary (C) |
| Class III | Significant comorbidities, when the risks of angiography outweigh the benefits of the procedure (C) |
| Stable angina (CCS I or II) that responds to drug treatment and no evidence of ischemia in noninvasive tests (C) | |
| Preference to avoid revascularization (C) |
CCS: Canadian Cardiovascular Society.
Recommendations for drug therapy in dyslipidemias
| Indications | Class-level of evidence |
|---|---|
| Statins are first choice treatment in primary and secondary prevention | I-A |
| Fibrate monotherapy or in combination with statins to prevent microvascular diseases in type 2 diabetes patients | I-A |
| Associations of ezetimibe or resins with statins when LDL-C target levels are not achieved | IIa-C |
| Association of niacin with statins | III-A |
| Omega-3 fatty acids for cardiovascular prevention | IIII-A |
Source: Brazilian guidelines for cardiovascular disease prevention[10].
Figure 1Algorithm for drug treatment of stable angina with antianginal drugs to relieve symptoms and improve quality of life. Details, levels of recommendation and evidence level: see the corresponding text.
Figure 2Algorithm for reduction of cardiovascular events in the presence of left ventricular dysfunction. Details, levels of recommendation and evidence level: see the corresponding text. ASA: Acetylsalicylic acid; AH: Arterial hypertension; ACE inhibitors: Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors; ARB: Angiotensin receptor blocker I; AP: Arterial pressure; HR: Heart rate.