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Stable Angina

NICE Clinical guideline [CG95] Recent-onset chest pain of suspected cardiac origin: assessment and diagnosis. Last updated: Nov 2016

NICE Clinical guideline [CG126] Stable angina: management. Last updated: Aug 2016

Background Information

Definition

Stable angina is the most common clinical manifestation of stable CAD:

  • Defined as pain / constricting discomfort in the chest / neck / shoulder / jaw / arm caused by insufficient myocardial perfusion

CAD can manifest clinically as either stable angina or as ACS:

CAD manifestation Pathophysiology Clinical presentation
Stable angina Stable, fixed coronary artery stenosis causing ischaemia on exertion Predictable symptoms on exertion and relieved by rest or nitrates
ACS Plaque rupture + acute thrombosis causing sudden reduction of myocardial perfusion Sudden onset symptoms at rest, or symptoms that do not improve with rest or nitrates

Be aware that stable angina is NOT the same as unstable angina. Unstable angina falls under the category of ACS.

Aetiology

Pathophysiology

Stable angina is caused by myocardial ischaemia resulting from an imbalance between myocardial oxygen supply and demand[ref]

Factors reducing oxygen supply: [ref]

  • Coronary artery atherosclerosis – most common
  • Coronary artery vasospasm (classically caused by cocaine use)
  • ↑ Heart rate
  • Anaemia

Factors increasing oxygen demand: [ref]

  • ↑ Heart rate (e.g. physical exertion, emotional stress)
  • ↑ Afterload (e.g. hypertension)

Risk Factors

Major risk factors (for developing CAD, thus stable angina): [ref]

  • Old age
  • Male
  • Smoking
  • Hypertension
  • Hyperlipidaemia (esp. ↑ LDL and ↓ HDL)
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Obesity (esp. central obesity)
  • Family history of premature CAD (defined as 1st degree relative with CAD at <55 y/o if male / <65 y/o if female)

Complications

Main complications are:

  • ACS
  • Heart failure
  • Increased overall risk of cardiovascular death

Diagnosis

To evaluate and diagnose stable angina, first perform a clinical assessment, then carry out diagnostic tests.

1. Clinical Assessment

Typical History of Stable Angina

Stable angina presents as repetitive and reversible attacks

Characteristic features:

  • Constricting discomfort in the front of the chest, or in the neck, shoulders, jaw or arms
  • Brought on by physical exertion 
  • Relieved by rest or GTN within ~5 min

Other common accompanying clinical features:

  • Dyspnoea
  • Diaphoresis
  • Nausea and vomiting

Additional factors to take into consideration:

Factors that make stable angina more likely Factors that make stable angina unlikely
  • Old age
  • Male
  • Presence of cardiovascular risk factors
  • Presence of other cardiovascular diseases
  • Established coronary artery disease
Chest pain / discomfort that is:
  • Continuous or very prolonged
  • Unrelated to activity
  • Brought on by breathing (pleuritic chest pain)
  • Associated with dizziness / palpitations / tingling / difficulty swallowing

Consider GI causes (e.g. GORD, peptic ulcer disease) or MSK pain (e.g. costochondritis, rib fracture)

Clinical Diagnosis

Make a clinical diagnosis based on how many of the characteristic stable angina features are present:

  • 3 features → typical angina
  • 2 features → atypical angina
  • 1 / 0 features → non-anginal chest pain

The 3 stable angina characteristic features (as described above) are:

  • Constricting discomfort in the front of the chest, or in the neck, shoulders, jaw or arms
  • Brought on by physical exertion 
  • Relieved by rest or GTN within ~5 min

2. Investigation and Diagnosis

Chest pain that occurs at rest or does not improve with rest / GTN is suggestive of unstable chest pain.

  • These patients should be assessed immediately with a resting ECG to exclude ACS
  • If ECG shows acute changes (e.g. ST elevation) → follow the ACS pathway (see this article)

If there is typical / atypical angina (diagnosed clinically) → perform the following diagnostic tests (on an outpatient basis).

Choice of diagnostic tests (to evaluate for CAD):

  • 1st line: CT coronary angiography (CTCA)

 

  • 2nd line: non-invasive functional imaging
    • Stress echocardiography (dobutamine / exercise)
    • Cardiac MRI
    • Nuclear perfusion imaging (myocardial perfusion scintigraphy)

 

  • 3rd line: invasive coronary angiography

NICE also recommends testing for anaemia, which is a known exacerbating factor of stable angina.

A diagnosis of stable angina can be confirmed if:

  • CTCA shows significant CAD (≥70% stenosis of at least 1 major artery segment or ≥50% stenosis of the left main coronary artery), or
  • Non-invasive functional imaging shows reversible myocardial ischaemia

A resting ECG is NOT routinely required to diagnose stable angina:

  • normal resting 12-lead ECG cannot exclude the diagnosis of stable angina
  • Possible ECG changes in stable angina include pathological Q wave / LBBB / ST or T wave abnormalities (indicative of ischaemia or previous infarction)

Management

All patients should all the following:

  • Drugs to prevent/manage angina attacks
  • Long-term medications
    • Anti-anginal drugs
    • Secondary prevention drugs

Last resort: revascularisation

Prevention and Management of Angina Attacks

1st line: sublingual GTN as needed

  • Use to manage acute attacks or as a preventive measure
  • Repeat dose after 5 minutes if pain persists
  • If the pain is not relieved after 5 minutes after using the 2nd dose → call an ambulance

Long Term Management

Anti-Anginal Drugs

Step 1: monotherapy of beta blocker (atenolol / bisoprolol / metoprolol / propranolol) / rate-limiting CCB (verapamil / diltiazem)

  • Avoid beta blockers in asthmatics
  • In heart failure, beta blockers are preferred and rate-limiting CCB should be avoided

Although not explicitly stated in the guidelines, it is sensible and good practice to titrate the first drug to the maximum tolerated dose before giving dual therapy.

Step 2: dual therapy of beta blocker (atenolol / bisoprolol / metoprolol / propranolol) + dihydropyridine CCB (e.g. amlodipine, felodipine, nifedipine)

Step 3: replace one of the drugs with 1 of the following

  • Long-acting nitrate (e.g. isosorbide dinitrate, isosorbide mononitrate)
  • Ivabradine (If funny channel blocker → reduces cardiac oxygen demand)
  • Nicorandil (sodium channel blocker → reduces cardiac oxygen demand)
  • Ranolazine (potassium channel activator → coronary vasodilation)

Do not routinely give 3 anti-anginal drugs at the same time.

Never combine a beta blocker with rate-limiting CCB (i.e. verapamil and diltiazem).

Contraindications and cautions for beta blockers and rate-limiting CCBs:

  • Heart rate <50 bpm
  • High-degree AV block (2nd / 3rd degree) without a pacemaker
  • Sick sinus syndrome without a pacemaker

Nitrate Tolerance

  • Continuous nitrate exposure, primarily with long-acting nitrate formulations (inc. oral isosorbide dinitrate/mononitrate), can result in drug tolerance.
  • Tolerance is uncommon and clinically insignificant with short-acting formulations (e.g., sublingual glyceryl trinitrate used for angina attacks); unless used excessively or at frequent intervals

Prevention

  • Nitrate-free intervals are recommended for prevention of tolerance with long-acting nitrate formulations [Ref]
    • Standard release formulations of isosorbide dinitrate/mononitrate are given in divided doses to maintain a nitrate free interval of 10-14 hours per day
    • Modified-release preparations: use a once-daily dose to maintain a nitrate-low period and thus minimize tolerance.

Secondary Prevention

All patients:

  • Aspirin 75mg OD
  • Atorvastatin 80 mg OD

Consider ACE inhibitors if there is concurrent diabetes mellitus.

NICE specifically states NOT to offer vitamin or fish oil supplements to treat stable angina due to the lack of evidence.

Revascularisation

Revascularisation should only be considered if symptoms are not controlled with optimal medical treatment.

2 main options of revascularisation:

  • Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)
  • Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)

 

CABG is preferred over PCI if any of the following:

  • >65 y/o
  • Concurrent diabetes mellites
  • Complex triple vessel disease +/- left main stem involvement

References

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