Cardiovascular Critical Care I
use of cardiopulmonary bypass (or performing off pump), are too broad to be discussed in greater
detail in this chapter. According to the Society of Thoracic Surgeons/American College of Cardiology/
American Heart Association (STS/ACC/AHA) CABG guidelines, emergency CABG is recommended
in patients with an acute MI in the following scenarios (J Am Coll Cardiol 2011;58:e123-210):
Primary PCI has failed or cannot be performed
Coronary anatomy is more suitable for CABG
Persistent ischemia of a significant area of myocardium at rest and/or hemodynamic instability
refractory to nonsurgical therapy is present
| d. | Requirement of surgical repair of a postinfarction mechanical complication of MI (i.e., ventricular |
|---|
septal rupture, mitral valve insufficiency caused by papillary muscle infarction and/or rupture, or
free wall rupture)
Patients with cardiogenic shock who are suitable for CABG, irrespective of the time interval from
MI to onset of shock and time from MI to CABG
Patients with life-threatening ischemic ventricular arrhythmias in the presence of a left main
stenosis of 50% or more and/or three-vessel CAD
CABG use is reasonable as a revascularization strategy in patients with multivessel CAD with
recurrent angina or MI within the first 48 hours of STEMI presentation as an alternative to a more
delayed strategy.
Early revascularization with PCI or CABG is reasonable for select patients older than 75 years with
ST-segment elevation or left bundle branch block who are suitable for revascularization irrespective
of the time interval from MI to onset of shock.
Medical management – No revascularization:
Less invasive strategies may be opted for rather than revascularization in some patients.
Considerations reinforce a patient-centered approach driven by evidence of ongoing/recurrent
ischemia and feasibility of revascularization, including myocardial viability, patient frailty, and
comorbid disease states.
Ongoing care outlined in section E remains the focus of optimizing aggressive medical management.
The roles and combinations of antithrombotics continue to be refined in select populations (those with
NSTEMI/ACS, STEMI, and PCI). For the most current guidelines and landmark trials, please see www.
acc.org/guidelines.
Platelets can be activated by several different mechanisms, only some of which can be inhibited
by medications.
Clopidogrel had previously been the standard of care P2Y12 inhibitor but has fallen out of
favor in ACS because of its slow onset of action, variable platelet inhibition because of genetic
polymorphisms (CYP2C19), drug interactions, and delayed onset of action, leading to an increased
risk of inadequate antiplatelet response or bleeding complications. Clopidogrel may still be used in
patients who are medically managed for ACS, in those receiving stents for non-ACS indications,
among patients at high risk of bleeding, those maintained on concomitant anticoagulation and
when cost of other P2Y12 inhibitors is prohibitive.