NON ST ELEVATION ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME (NSTE-ACS)
Definition
NSTE-ACS includes:
- NSTEMI (Non-ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction) → myocardial necrosis + ↑ troponin
- Unstable Angina (UA) → ischemia(ECG CHANGES) without necrosis (normal troponin)
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Plaque rupture/erosion → platelet activation → thrombus formation
- Partial or intermittent occlusion (NOT complete like STEMI)
- Leads to subendocardial ischemia
|
Feature |
NSTE-ACS |
STEMI |
|
Vessel occlusion |
Partial |
Complete |
|
Ischemia |
Subendocardial |
Transmural |
|
ECG |
ST depression/T inversion |
ST elevation |
|
Necrosis |
± (NSTEMI vs UA) |
Always |
CLINICAL FEATURES
Typical symptoms
- Rest angina >20 min
- Crescendo angina
- Retrosternal chest pain (pressure/heaviness)
- Radiation → arm/jaw
- Associated:
- Dyspnea
- Diaphoresis
- Nausea
Atypical
- Elderly, diabetics, females:
- Epigastric pain
- Isolated dyspnea
- Silent ischemia
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Pulmonary embolism
- Aortic dissection
- Pericarditis
- GERD
- Musculoskeletal pain
ECG FINDINGS (ESC 2023)
- ST depression ≥0.5 mm in ≥2 contiguous leads
- T wave inversion ≥1 mm ≥2 contiguous leads
- Transient ST elevation (<20 min)
- Dynamic changes → highly suggestive
Wellens syndrome
- Deep/biphasic T waves in V2–V3
- Critical proximal LAD stenosis
- Pain-free ECG finding
- DO NOT DO stress test → immediate angiography
Normal ECG ≠ exclude NSTE-ACS
CARDIAC BIOMARKERS
|
Marker |
Role |
|
High-sensitivity troponin (hs-Tn) |
Gold standard |
|
CK-MB |
Rarely used |
Diagnosis (Universal Definition of MI)
- Rise/fall of troponin with at least one value above the 99th percentile upper reference limit (URL). + ≥1:
- Ischemic symptoms
- ECG changes
- Imaging evidence
|
Scenario |
Preferred Definition of Significant Change |
|
Initial troponin normal |
Assay-specific absolute delta (ng/L) |
|
Initial troponin elevated |
≥20% rise or fall suggests acute injury |
|
Chronic myocardial injury |
Stable values with <20% variation |
|
Acute MI diagnosis |
Rise/fall + ≥1 value above 99th percentile URL + clinical evidence of ischemia |
DIAGNOSTIC ALGORITHM (ESC 0/1-HOUR PROTOCOL)
hs-Troponin strategy:
- 0 hour → baseline
- 1 hour → repeat
|
Result |
Action |
|
Rule-out |
Discharge / alternative dx |
|
Rule-in |
Treat as NSTEMI |
|
Observe |
Repeat at 3 hours |
A. RULE-OUT ZONE (LOW RISK)
Criteria (general ESC concept; assay-specific cutoffs apply):
- Very low hs-cTn (near limit of detection)
- OR low hs-cTn + no significant rise at 1 hour
B. RULE-IN ZONE (HIGH RISK)
Criteria:
- Markedly elevated hs-cTn
- OR significant rise within 1 hour
C. OBSERVATION ZONE (INTERMEDIATE)
Criteria:
- Values between rule-in and rule-out
- Uncertain delta change
Action:
- Repeat troponin (2–3 hr)
- Clinical reassessment
- Imaging if needed
Non-Invasive Testing in Suspected NSTE-ACS
1. Coronary CT Angiography (CCTA)
Guideline Indications
Use when:
- Acute chest pain with:
No ischemic ECG changes
Negative serial hs-cTn
Low or intermediate risk
- Suspected CAD where diagnosis remains uncertain
- Alternative to stress testing
- Evaluation before discharge in low-risk NSTE-ACS
2. Exercise Stress ECG
Indications
Only if ALL are present:
- ACS ruled out
- Able to exercise
- Resting ECG interpretable
ECG Must Not Have
- LBBB
- Ventricular paced rhythm
- Significant baseline ST depression
- Pre-excitation (WPW)
- Digoxin effect
3. Stress Imaging
Includes:Stress Echo/Nuclear MPI/Stress CMR/PET Perfusion
Indications
- Patient cannot exercise
Examples:Frailty/Severe arthritis/Stroke/Peripheral arterial disease
- ECG Uninterpretable
Examples:LBBB/Pacemaker/LVH with strain/Digoxin use
- Intermediate-risk CAD
Need assessment of ischemic burden.
- Prior Revascularization
- Previous PCI
- Previous CABG
Functional assessment often preferred over simple anatomic imaging.
4. Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (MPI)
Includes:SPECT/PET
Indications
- Intermediate-risk stable chest pain
- Suspected ischemia
- Prior PCI/CABG
- Equivocal exercise ECG
- Assessment of ischemic burden
5. Cardiac MRI (CMR)
ACS-Related Indications
MINOCA-Myocardial Infarction with Non-Obstructive Coronary Arteries
CMR can differentiate:
- True MI
- Myocarditis
- Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
Troponin Positive but Cath Normal
Suspected Myocarditis
Typical findings:
- Edema
- Late gadolinium enhancement
Suspected Takotsubo Syndrome
Characteristic wall-motion abnormalities.
Viability Assessment
Before revascularization in ischemic cardiomyopathy.
Infiltrative Cardiomyopathy
Examples:
- Amyloidosis
- Sarcoidosis
RISK STRATIFICATION
GRACE Score (GUIDELINE PREFERRED)
- Predicts mortality
- Guides invasive strategy
TIMI Score –simpler, less accurate
MANAGEMENT
—Conservative / Non-Invasive Strategy
|
Low-Risk Features |
|
Negative serial troponins |
|
No ischemic ECG changes |
|
Symptoms resolved |
|
Hemodynamically stable |
|
Low clinical risk scores |
Management:
- Serial ECGs
- Serial hs-cTn measurements
- Coronary CTA or stress testing before discharge or shortly after discharge
- Angiography only if ischemia is demonstrated
—NSTE-ACS: Timing of Invasive Strategy (2025 ACC/AHA & Contemporary Guideline-Based Approach)
|
Immediate Invasive Strategy (<2 Hours) |
Early Invasive Strategy (<24 Hours) |
Selective Invasive (Ischemia-Guided) Strategy |
|
Cardiogenic shock |
GRACE score >140 |
Hemodynamically stable |
|
Hemodynamic instability |
Confirmed NSTEMI (troponin-positive ACS) without very-high-risk features |
No recurrent ischemia |
|
Refractory or recurrent chest pain despite optimal medical therapy |
Dynamic ST-segment depression |
No heart failure |
|
Acute heart failure/pulmonary edema due to ACS |
Transient ST-segment elevation |
No malignant arrhythmias |
|
Sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) |
New or presumed new ischemic ECG changes |
Low-to-intermediate risk clinical profile |
|
Ventricular fibrillation (VF) |
Recurrent symptoms despite initial stabilization |
Negative or minimally elevated troponins |
|
Life-threatening arrhythmias |
Diabetes mellitus with NSTEMI (especially with additional high-risk features) |
Low GRACE score |
|
Resuscitated cardiac arrest with suspected ACS |
CKD with NSTEMI and high-risk features |
No significant dynamic ECG changes |
|
Mechanical complications of MI(acute MR, VSD, free-wall rupture) |
Reduced LVEF (<40%) or heart failure due to ischemia |
Suitable for non-invasive risk stratification |
|
Ongoing ischemia with instability |
Prior PCI/CABG with high-risk presentation |
Coronary CTA or stress imaging can be performed first |
|
Electrical instability |
Intermediate-to-high ischemic risk despite stabilization |
Angiography reserved for positive ischemia testing or clinical deterioration |
1. ANTIPLATELET THERAPY
A. ASPIRIN (MANDATORY)
- Loading: 150–300 mg PO (chewed)
OR 75–250 mg IV - Maintenance: 75–100 mg OD lifelong
- Give immediately on suspicion
- Contraindication: active bleeding, true allergy
B. P2Y12 INHIBITORS (SECOND AGENT IN DAPT)
–if early invasive planned– Routine pretreatment NOT recommended,Give AFTER coronary anatomy known.
-Non Invasive strategy—Clopidogrel/Ticagrelor recommended
1. TICAGRELOR (PREFERRED)
- Loading: 180 mg
- Maintenance: 90 mg BD
Preferred in most NSTE-ACS
Works regardless of CYP metabolism
Side effects:
- Dyspnea
- Bradyarrhythmia
Avoid:
- Active bleeding
- Prior intracranial hemorrhage
2. PRASUGREL
- Loading: 60 mg
- Maintenance: 10 mg OD (5 mg if <60 kg or elderly)
Preferred if PCI planned and anatomy known by angiography(The recommendation is largely based on the ISAR-REACT 5 trial.In ACS patients planned for an invasive strategy, a prasugrel-based strategy resulted in fewer ischemic events (death, MI, stroke) than a ticagrelor-based strategy without a significant increase in major bleeding. This led ESC to recommend that prasugrel should be considered in preference to ticagrelor in ACS patients undergoing PCI)
Avoid:
- Prior stroke/TIA (absolute)
- Age >75 (relative)
- Weight<60kg (relative)
3. CLOPIDOGREL
- Loading: 300–600 mg
- Maintenance: 75 mg OD
Use when:
- High bleeding risk
- Oral anticoagulant use
- Cost issues
Duration of DAPT
- Standard: 12 months(Class I Recommendation to reduce MACE.)
- Shortened (3–6 months) → high bleeding risk(Ticagrelor Monotherapy After 1 Month For ACS patients undergoing PCI who tolerate DAPT:(2025 ACC/AHA)
- Prior intracranial hemorrhage
- Recurrent GI bleeding
- Severe anemia
- Advanced age with frailty
- Severe CKD
- Extended (>12 months(18months,24 months,30 months) → high ischemic risk + low bleeding risk
- Prior MI
- Diffuse multivessel CAD
- Diabetes mellitus
- Recurrent ACS
- Multiple stents
- Complex PCI
- Prior stent thrombosis
4. Patients Requiring Long-Term Oral Anticoagulation
Examples:
- Atrial fibrillation
- Mechanical valve
- Venous thromboembolism
Recommendation
Triple therapy:for only 1–4 weeks
- Aspirin
- Clopidogrel
- Oral anticoagulant
Stop aspirin and Continue: Clopidogrel + anticoagulant
This significantly reduces bleeding risk
2. ANTICOAGULATION MANDATORY-(until revascularization or discharge)
A. FONDAPARINUX (ESC FIRST-LINE )
- Dose: 2.5 mg SC OD
Preferred due to:
- Lowest bleeding risk
- Once daily dosing
IMPORTANT:
If PCI done → ADD UFH bolus (to prevent catheter thrombosis)
Avoid if:eGFR <20 ml/min
B. LOW MOLECULAR WEIGHT HEPARIN (ENOXAPARIN)
- Dose: 1 mg/kg SC BD
Adjust:eGFR <30 → 1 mg/kg OD
Avoid switching between heparins
C. UNFRACTIONATED HEPARIN (UFH)
- Bolus: 60–70 U/kg
- Infusion: 12–15 U/kg/hr
Monitor aPTT (1.5–2.5× control)
D. BIVALIRUDIN (PCI SETTING)
- Bolus: 0.75 mg/kg
- Infusion: 1.75 mg/kg/hr
3. GP IIb/IIIa INHIBITORS (SELECTIVE USE)
Drugs:
- Abciximab
- Tirofiban
- Eptifibatide
Indications (ESC)
- High thrombus burden
- No-reflow / bailout PCI
NOT routine
4. ANTI-ISCHEMIC THERAPY
A. NITRATES(Not routinely lifelong)
Dose
- SL: 0.4 mg every 5 min (max 3 doses)
- IV infusion(Acute phase only): 5–10 µg/min → titrate
Avoid:
- Hypotension
- RV infarction
- PDE-5 inhibitor use
In NSTE-ACS, long-acting nitrates (e.g. isosorbide mononitrate, isosorbide dinitrate):
ESC/ACC: They are symptomatic drugs only, not disease-modifying.
WHEN ARE THEY INDICATED?
1. Persistent/Recurrent Angina after stabilization
If patient continues to have chest pain despite:
- Beta-blockers
- Revascularization (PCI)
2. Patients NOT suitable for revascularization
3. Vasospastic (Prinzmetal) component
Along with calcium channel blockers
Isosorbide mononitrate
- 30–60 mg OD → titrate up to 120 mg
Isosorbide dinitrate
- 10–40 mg BD/TDS
Continuous exposure → tolerance develops Therefore:
- Give nitrate-free interval (10–12 hrs/day)
B. BETA-BLOCKERS
- Metoprolol:
- IV: 5 mg every 5 min (max 15 mg)
- Oral(Preferred): 25–50 mg BD
- Carvedilol: 3.125 mg BID → target 25 mg BID (50 mg/day)
Avoid:
- Acute HF
- Cardiogenic shock
- Bradycardia
- NOTE-AECOPD is contraindication Not COPD
Duration: At least 12 months
Lifelong if:
- LV dysfunction
- Prior MI
- Ongoing ischemia
C. CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS
- Diltiazem / Verapamil
Use if:
- Beta-blocker contraindicated
- Vasospasm
5. STATINS (HIGH-INTENSITY — MANDATORY LIFELONG)
- Atorvastatin: 40–80 mg OD
- Rosuvastatin: 20–40 mg OD
Start early (within 24 hrs)
6. ACE INHIBITORS / ARBs( longterm )
- Start within 24 hrs if:
- LV dysfunction
- Diabetes
- Hypertension
Example:
- Ramipril 2.5 mg → titrate
- Enalapril 2.5 mg BD
7. MINERALOCORTICOID RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS(Long term)
- Eplerenone / Spironolactone
If:EF ≤40% + HF/DM
8. ADDITIONAL IMPORTANT DRUGS
A. MORPHINE (SELECTIVE)
- Dose: 2–5 mg IV
Use cautiously (may delay P2Y12 absorption)
B. PROTON PUMP INHIBITORS
- Indication:High GI bleed risk
C. OXYGEN Only if SpO₂ <90%
