MI DEFINITIONS
ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
Elevated troponin WITH clinical evidence of ischemia
TYPE 1 MI
MI WITH plaque rupture and thrombus
TYPE 2 MI
MI with imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. NO ruptured plaque and thrombus. May be due to:
- Vasospasm
- Coronary dissection
- Coronary embolism
- O2 supply-demand mismatch, with or without underlying CAD. May be due to:
- Anemia
- Hypotension
- Hypoxia
- Bradycardia
- Hypertension
- Tachycardia
CLINICAL EVIDENCE OF ISCHEMIA (MUST HAVE ONE)
- Symptoms suggestive of ischemia
- ECG changes suggestive of ischemia – new ST segment elevation or depression, new BBB, new pathologic Q waves, new T wave inversions
- Echo changes suggestive of ischemia – new wall motion abnormalities
INSTEAD OF DEMAND ISCHEMIA, CONSIDER TYPE 2 MI WHEN THERE IS ELEVATION IN TROPONIN WITH CLINICAL EVIDENCE OF ISCHEMIA.
If there is NO clinical evidence of ischemia, an elevation in troponin should be termed, “non-MI elevated troponin”. THIS IS NOT A MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION!
Patients with acute MI (any type) are inpatient appropriate!