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DISEASES OF THE BLOOD VESSELS OF
THE HEART
November 2001
LEARN ABOUT YOUR HEART...MADE SIMPLE 19
How does the heart receive its blood supply?
The heart is a pump that continuously beats at 60 to 100 beats
per minute during the life of a person.This pump requires oxygen
and nutrients to achieve its tasks.These are delivered to the
heart via blood vessels called the coronary arteries (see Figure 1).
There are 3 or 4 major coronary arteries that deliver blood to
the heart.These supply the top (left anterior descending artery),
the side (left circumflex artery), and the bottom (right coronary
artery) of the heart.Any interruption of blood supply to any of
those coronary arteries can lead to heart damage to a correspondent
part of the heart muscle.
How do the coronary arteries fill with plaque and
become obstructed?
The coronary arteries are covered on the inside by a lining
called the endothelium, a single layer of cells that covers every
single blood vessel in our body. It has been estimated that if this
DISEASES OF THE BLOOD VESSELS OF
THE HEART
Nicolas W. Shammas, MS, MD, FACC, FACP
C H A P T E R 3
Left Main Coronary Artery
Circumflex Artery
Left Anterior
Descending Artery
Right Coronary
Artery
Figure 1.
Heart with
major
coronary
arteries.
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DISEASES OF THE BLOOD VESSELS OF THE HEART
lining of all the blood vessels from a single individual is spread
on a flat surface, it could cover 2 tennis courts in size.This single
layer of cells, however, separates the blood vessels from
health and disease.
Any damage to the endothelium can lead to its invasion by
blood elements called monocytes. These monocytes penetrate
under the lining of those blood vessels and absorb fat from the
bloodstream.They become enlarged in size and are called foam
cells. These foam cells promote a complex reaction under the
endothelium, which subsequently causes inflammation and
attracts various other cells to the plaque area. The plaque
expands and starts to impinge on the opening of the blood vessels
that supply the heart (see Figure 2).
It is well known that the process of plaque formation starts
very early in childhood. Autopsies on young soldiers who died
in wars have shown that the blood vessels of their bodies already
show the buildup of fat under the endothelium. Over twothirds
of people over the age of 40 show the buildup of plaque
in the blood vessels that supply their heart, as seen by ultrasound
scanning of those blood vessels.
What is angina?
Angina is a symptom of chest pain—also described as chest pressure,
a heavy feeling in the chest, or a squeezing sensation in the
chest—that is caused by a lack of blood supply to a part of the
heart muscle.Angina is described as either stable or unstable.
A narrowing in 1 of the blood vessels of the heart by plaque
Intima Layer
Adventitia
Media Layer
Plaque Blockage
Figure 2.
Artery with
plaque
buildup.
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buildup causes stable angina. Stable angina occurs when a person
is active and doing physical exertion. It typically resolves
within two to three minutes of resting.This type of angina does
not occur at rest. As a person becomes active and exerts himself
or herself, the heart has to pump faster and stronger.With the
increase in the heart rate, there is a need to increase the blood
supply to the heart to continue to match its demands. If plaque
buildup is severe enough to narrow the coronary arteries, the
blood supply to the heart cannot increase at the rate needed by
the heart. A mismatch of demand and blood supply occurs.This
generates discomfort in the heart—angina. Once the patient
rests and the demands of the heart for blood supply returns to
normal, the pain resolves.
In contrast to stable angina, a rupture of the plaque inside the
blood vessels causes unstable angina. This leads to a subsequent
accumulation of a clot at the area of the plaque rupture, which
abruptly interrupts the blood supply to the heart. Angina then
occurs with very minimal activity or at rest. This type of angina
requires immediate medical attention.
How does the patient perceive angina?
Angina is perceived as chest pressure, tightness, a squeeze, or
heaviness in the chest.This could radiate to the arm and the jaw,
the shoulders, the back, or the abdomen.The pain can be associated
with an increase in shortness of breath, a feeling of nausea,
and occasional vomiting. Also, patients break out in a sweat,
which is called diaphoresis. Lightheadedness and anxiety accompany
these symptoms. Patients might describe 1 or more of these
symptoms, without any chest discomfort on many occasions.
Women and people with diabetes tend to present with atypical
symptoms without chest pain.
What should you do if you experience chest pain or
other symptoms of angina?
If you experience chest pain or any of the previously described
symptoms, it is important that you not attempt to self-diagnose.
In this situation, it is very important to seek immediate medical
attention. If the pain occurs at rest, this is essentially an emergency
and driving to the hospital or having someone drive you
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can be very dangerous.The best way to deal with your rest angina
is to call 9-1-1 and allow paramedics to transport you to the
hospital. The first hour of the onset of chest discomfort is the
most dangerous. Electrical disturbances in the heart can occur,
and the heart could cease pumping blood to the brain and the
vital organs of the body. This can be corrected easily if you are
being transported to the hospital with trained professionals.
However, sudden cardiac death can occur if you are still at home
or you are in a regular car on your way to the hospital. A sudden
change in symptoms—such as the occurrence of nausea or
vomiting, sudden worsening of breathing, or the occurrence of
chest pain—warrants immediate hospital evaluation.
If chest pain or the anginal symptoms have been occurring
primarily with exertion or activity but never at rest, this tends to
be somewhat less of an emergency. However, evaluation should
be performed relatively soon. Calling your doctor and getting
evaluated relatively soon is important. The symptoms of pain
with exertion are classic anginal symptoms, and they have a high
chance of being related to obstructive plaque in the coronary
arteries.
How does a patient die from a heart attack?
The most common cause of death from heart attack is electrical
instability to the heart. Once the blood supply is interrupted,
the electrical conduction inside the heart becomes disturbed.
Abnormal electrical circuits are generated in the bottom
chambers of the heart. These lead to quivering of the heart
muscle. The heart muscle becomes inefficient in pumping
blood. These arrhythmias are called ventricular tachycardia or
ventricular fibrillation.The blood will be able to generate minimal
to no blood supply to the vital organs of the body, including
the brain. A person loses consciousness usually within 5 to
10 seconds of the occurrence of this event. Death occurs if the
electrical system of the heart is not restored back to its normal
condition within 5 to 6 minutes of the electrical disturbance.
Rarely, heart failure resulting from the heart attack leads to
death. By far, the majority of deaths are related to this electrical
instability. Paramedics and hospitals are equipped with machines
called defibrillators that are capable of aborting those electrical
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heart rhythms by delivering an electrical shock to the chest.
Automatic external defibrillators are now widely placed in public
places, such as airports, schools, and large business centers.
Operation Heartbeat, a program of the American Heart
Association, has intended to extend the use of automatic external
defibrillators in public places in order to save lives of heart
attack victims.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), which includes artificial
respiration and chest compression, can sustain enough
blood circulation for the first 10 minutes after the electrical
instability has occurred.
However, without the more definitive therapy of defibrillation
using the defibrillator, CPR alone is inadequate to restore
a normal heart rhythm. In fact, survival rate after 6 minutes of
the arrhythmia is slim despite CPR and without defibrillation.
What does my doctor do when I come to the
emergency room with chest pain?
Your doctor will evaluate you with a full history and physical
exam. Details of the chest pain, such as its onset, severity, radiation,
and association with other symptoms or with activity, will
all be important information to provide.A physical exam to listen
to your lungs and heart will be important. Based on all the
information gathered, including blood testing, your physician
will attempt to determine whether your symptoms could be
related to your heart or are noncardiac in origin.
If it is a possibility that these symptoms are heart-related, you
will be asked to stay in the hospital. Many hospitals have a chest
pain unit where you will be observed for several hours on a
monitor. Serial blood testing will be obtained to rule out the
possibility of heart injury. An electrocardiogram also will be
obtained. Eventually, if all your tests are unremarkable, a stress
test will be performed.
All these tests will help your doctor decide whether to admit
you to the hospital for further testing, such as a coronary
angiogram. On the other hand, if your chest pain has occurred
at rest and continues to do so in the emergency room, your doctor
will have to assume that this is an unstable anginal symptom.
You will then be directly admitted to the hospital and placed on
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medical treatment. If the suspicion for cardiac-related symptoms
is high, your doctor might proceed directly with an angiogram.
What is a cardiac catheterization or a coronary
angiogram?
A cardiac catheterization is essentially the same as a coronary
angiogram.This procedure is performed in the cardiac catheterization
laboratory. During this procedure, a small plastic tube is
inserted in the blood vessel in the groin, called the common
femoral artery.This small plastic tube or catheter is placed under
a local anesthetic.Through this catheter, plastic tubes are placed
inside the blood vessels under x-ray guidance. These go to the
heart, where a contrast dye is injected.The dye is injected directly
in the heart’s chamber as well as in the blood vessels of your
heart. As the dye is being injected in those blood vessels, a camera
takes multiple pictures of your heart, which will allow your
physician to see your coronary arteries and determine the location
of the blockages, if present.
The angiogram is considered an invasive procedure. It carries
some risks with it.These risks vary depending on the condition
of the patient.Patients with heart failure and reduced heart function,
diabetes, or kidney problems tend to be at exceptionally
high risk. Patients with previous history of heart attacks, strokes,
and blockages in the blood vessels of the legs are also at higher
risk. However, the overall risks of the procedure remain small. In
a non-emergent angiogram, the risk of death should be less than
1 in 1,000, risk of strokes 1 in 500, and the risk of major bleeding
from the insertion site of the catheter should be less than 1%.
Obviously, these risks also vary if the angiogram is only for diagnostic
purposes to identify the location of the blockage or for
treatment purposes to treat the blockage.
During the treatment of blockages, large amounts of blood
thinners are administered, which increases the risk of bleeding
and complications. Other risks of the angiogram also include
infection, damage to the nerves in the groin area, damage to the
arteries of the heart themselves, as well as the aorta, the main
artery that comes out of the heart and supplies blood to the rest
of the body.Your doctor will weigh carefully all those risks compared
to the potential benefits of the test.
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Typically, an informed consent—a legal contract that authorizes
the physician to proceed with the test—is obtained after you
understand these risks and your questions and concerns are
answered. Signing a consent form essentially acknowledges your
understanding of these risks and your willingness to proceed
with the test.You should treat it seriously, carefully read it, and
understand it.The physician or the nurse should be available to
answer any questions you might have.
How do we treat blockages in the coronary arteries
once they are found?
Blockages in the blood vessels of the heart are treated in 3 different
ways.
1.Your doctor might decide that your coronary blockages are
only borderline in nature or insignificant, and preventative therapy
and medical therapy might be advised.
2. If your blockages, however, are severe, the treatment can be
done by either an angioplasty or a bypass surgery. During an
angioplasty, your cardiologist passes a balloon into the blocked
arteries. Once the balloon is inflated at the area of the blockage
(see Figure 3), the blockage will be compressed and the artery is
stretched. A stent, or a stainless steel mesh, is most frequently
deployed in the area of treatment to keep the artery widely open
and prevent it from collapse.The choice of the stent depends on
the type of blockages, their location, and the ability to deliver the
stent to that part of your coronary arteries.
Although the current standard of treating blockages is with
Artery (section
removed to view stent)
Stent
Balloon
Flexible
Guidewire
Figure 3.
Stent,
mounted on
a balloon,
being
implanted in
an artery.
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the use of a stent, some blockages are not amenable to stenting
because of their size or the difficulty of delivering the stents to
a particular blockage because of blood vessel tortuosity and calcification.
Current stents also have medications in them. These
medications prevent the recurrence of blockages within the area
of the treatment.The choice of the stents is also guided by certain
rules that your doctor might follow. Currently, the majority
of the blockages are managed through the angioplasty process.
3.However, some blockages might be in locations too dangerous
to treat with angioplasty or might be extensive for an angioplasty
procedure.They might be complex in nature, particularly
if they occur in a person with diabetes. Currently, the trend is to
treat those blockages with a bypass operation. During the bypass
operation, a blood vessel under the collarbone or a vein derived
from under the skin of the legs is utilized to bypass the area of
the blockage (see Figure 4).
How long does it take to recover from the treatment of a
blockage in the heart?
If an angioplasty is utilized as the primary method of treating
a blockage, generally you stay in the hospital for 23 hours.
Within 72 hours, you should be able to drive and resume your
normal activities.
The exception to this is if you have had a heart attack. After a
Right Coronary
Bypass Graft
Circumflex Bypass
Graft
Left Anterior Descending
Bypass Graft
Veins are grafted from the
aorta to the native vessel,
bypassing the blocked
areas in the native vessels.
Figure 4.
Heart with
veins
bypassing
blocked
coronary
arteries.
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heart attack, typically a patient cannot drive for 2 weeks and
should be undergoing cardiac rehabilitation for a minimum of 4
weeks prior to release back to work.Your doctor will decide on
the size of heart attack that you had, the extent of cardiac rehabilitation
required, and the optimal time for you to return to work.
On the other hand, bypass surgery would require that you
stay in the hospital for an average of 5 to 6 days.This can be significantly
more prolonged if complications occur.The recovery
phase is in the range of about 6 weeks. For about 3 months, you
should avoid carrying any weight that exceeds 10 pounds and
avoid any form of exertion that requires pulling and pushing. It
is also important to minimize any trauma to the area of the
wound in the middle of the chest. Driving typically is not permitted
during the first month after bypass surgery.
There are many exceptions to the above rules based on
your condition, complications occurring during surgery, and
your recovery.
What is the long-term outcome following treatment of
blockages in the heart?
Following the treatment of a blockage with an angioplasty, there
is an immediate inflammation that occurs at the site of the treatment.
This response of the blood vessel to the injury that the balloon
has caused triggers the formation of scar tissue at the site of
the treatment. Patients develop scar tissue to a different extent
for unclear reasons.The scar tissue that develops within the stent
can potentially cause a recurrence of a blockage in the area of
the treatment.
When balloon angioplasty alone is utilized without stenting,
the recurrence of the blockage is in the range of about 40%.
When a stent is used, the recurrence of a blockage is in the range
of 15 to 20%.
Higher rate of recurrence occurs in people with diabetes,
patients with small blood vessels, and those with long areas of
blockages.
With the advent of stents loaded with drugs that suppress
these blockages (drug-eluting stents), the rate of recurrence of
scar tissue is currently about 5 to 9%.
It is typical for scar tissue to form within the first 6 months
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following an angioplasty. If this does not occur within the first
6 months, it is extremely less likely that it will occur afterward.
Your doctor might elect to proceed with a stress test at about
4 to 6 months following an angioplasty to determine whether
enough scar tissue has occurred to block the artery again. The
decision to do this stress test is generally a clinical one and physician-
dependent.
The overall outcome of the patient, however, from the standpoint
of preventing a heart attack is mostly dependent on preventative
measures rather than the angioplasty process itself. In
other words, angioplasty for blockages that have caused no
symptoms or only stable symptoms generally does not affect a
person’s survival.The major impact of angioplasty is on improving
the quality of life and lessening the need for medications.
In order to prevent death or a heart attack long-term, strict
control of cardiac risk factors becomes important.This includes
controlling blood pressure, cholesterol, blood sugar, and weight
and avoiding smoking. Dietary modification, exercise, and stress
reduction also become very important.These will be covered in
detail in the preventative chapter of this book.
Following a bypass surgery, the procedure’s long-term success
depends on the continued normal functioning of the bypass
grafts. It is known that 10 to 15% of bypass grafts can deteriorate
within the first year of surgery. Also, at about 10 years from
a bypass, two-thirds of all bypasses are expected to have significant
buildup of plaques and blockages. There has been a lot of
progress made recently in the treatment of those bypass grafts.
However, again, the overall long-term survival and benefit is
highly dependent on preventative measures. Several studies have
indicated that the viability of bypass grafts and their overall
health is related to taking blood thinners, such as aspirin or
clopidogrel, and the use of some cholesterol-lowering medications,
such as statins. Research is continually ongoing to find
ways to preserve those bypasses and prevent them from deteriorating
or blocking shortly after the surgery.
What is a heart attack and how does it happen?
Heart attack happens when there is a sudden interruption of the
blood supply to a part of the heart muscle.This leads to death of
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the muscle tissue.A heart attack leads to symptoms similar to angina.
However, these symptoms tend to be more prolonged and
generally are more than a half hour in duration.The interruption
of the blood supply to the heart occurs because of a plaque rupture.
A plaque, irrespective of severity, can break, exposing the
inside of the plaque to the blood elements.The blood forms a clot
on the top of the ruptured plaque. If the clot does not block the
artery entirely, unstable angina certainly will occur, as described
previously. However, if the interruption in the blood supply is
complete because of a full clot, the muscle of the heart supplied
by this particular blood vessel will be deprived of nutrients and
oxygen and will die.
The most important step in the management of a heart attack
is to restore the blood supply to the heart muscle as quickly as possible.
The current guidelines strongly suggest that the artery should
be opened with the angioplasty procedure within 90 minutes of a
patient’s arrival to the emergency room. If the angioplasty procedure
is not available to this particular emergency room and hospital,
a clot-dissolving (or thrombolytic) medicine needs to be used
immediately, within 30 minutes of arrival to the emergency room.
Most hospitals are able to initiate the use of these thrombolytic
drugs within about 20 minutes of a patient arriving to the emergency
room.
Current data strongly suggest, however, that angioplasty is a
more effective way of opening up an artery in a heart attack situation
and probably leads to better short- and long-term outcomes.
Therefore, it is imperative that when the pain starts or when
symptoms of a heart attack start, the patient needs to be transported
to an emergency room as soon as possible.Time is extremely
precious, and the longer the delay in opening a closed artery, the
more damage will happen to the heart muscle. In fact, in 4 to 6
hours after the artery is closed, the damage is essentially complete.
There is strong data to suggest that the earlier the artery is opened,
the higher the likelihood of survival from a heart attack.
What medications should I expect to be on following a
heart attack?
Following the acute treatment of a heart attack, which is primarily
restoring the blood supply to the heart muscle, a patient is
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placed on several medications to reduce the chance of another
heart attack and reduce mortality.
The standard therapy consists of the use of a beta blocker that
has been shown to reduce heart failure and arrhythmias and prevent
stretching and dilatation of the heart muscle following a
heart attack.
In addition, the patient is expected to be on a statin, which is
a cholesterol-lowering medication that has also shown to substantially
prevent the chance of another heart attack.The use of
blood thinners, such as aspirin and clopidogrel (Plavix), has
become standard therapy to also reduce the chance of another
cardiac event. The use of an angiotensin-converting enzyme
(ACE) inhibitor in patients following a heart attack and reduced
left ventricular function is also now a standard to prolong life
and reduce the chance of further cardiovascular events.
With the use of a beta blocker, an ACE inhibitor, aspirin,
clopidogrel, and a statin, one would expect that the chance of
recurrence of a heart attack should be reduced to less than 3%
per year on this preventative therapy.
In addition to pharmacologic therapy, the patient will be
strongly advised to adhere to strict dietary restrictions, weight
control, exercise, and a no-smoking policy. All these changes
require significant lifestyle modifications, which at times can be
challenging. However, a patient striving for better health and
prevention of another heart attack generally adheres to these
guidelines.
How important is cardiac rehabilitation after a heart
attack or a bypass surgery?
Cardiac rehabilitation in a structured format, with the patient
being monitored, has been shown to substantially improve quality
of life. Data also suggest an improvement in survival. Cardiac
rehabilitation allows patients to gain confidence in their ability
to do things, gradually increases their fitness level, and helps
them develop a habit to exercise routinely on a long-term basis.
The importance of exercise is mostly in its cardiovascular fitness
and conditioning that allows a stronger ability of the body
to extract oxygen from the blood, as well as improve the overall
efficiency of the heart. A trained and fit individual tends to have
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a slower heart rate at rest and a lower adrenaline blood level.
These are very protective elements overall to the heart.
Cardiac rehabilitation is very strongly recommended to cardiac
patients after an angioplasty, a heart attack, or bypass surgery.
Many patients see a tremendous improvement in their sense of
well-being and an improvement in their depression after a heart
attack.This, in itself, also has significant protective effect to their
overall health as well as cardiovascular health.
The second phase of cardiac rehabilitation is the outpatient
phase that follows a heart attack and is generally monitored
under the guidance of cardiac rehabilitation nurses or technicians.
The patient is generally placed on a monitor, and different
kinds of exercises are encouraged, with close monitoring of the
heart rates and the blood pressure, as well as the heart rhythm.A
gradual increase in the target heart rate is done under the guidance
of the primary cardiologist.
The third phase of cardiac rehabilitation is a less-monitored
phase where a person joins a group of heart patients and exercises
on a routine basis. Phase III provides significant group support
to the heart patient and allows uninterrupted, continued
exercise with minimal supervision but with some form of continued
guidance.
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