name: managing-acute-chest-pain language: en description: Guides chest pain workup following ACS pathways with troponin timing and disposition criteria. Use when evaluating chest pain, running ACS protocols, or determining observation vs. discharge. tags:
- management
- emergency-medicine
metadata:
author: casemark
practice_areas:
- Emergency Medicine document_types:
- Management Report skill_modes:
- Management
- Coordination
Managing Acute Chest Pain
Guides the evaluation and management of acute chest pain following ACS pathways with troponin timing, risk stratification, and evidence-based disposition criteria.
Why This Skill Exists
Chest pain accounts for approximately 6-8 million ED visits annually in the United States, making it the second most common reason for emergency evaluation. Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) — encompassing STEMI, NSTEMI, and unstable angina — must be rapidly identified because delays in reperfusion directly increase mortality. The ACC/AHA mandate a door-to-ECG time of ≤10 minutes and door-to-balloon time of ≤90 minutes for STEMI. Simultaneously, approximately 85% of chest pain patients do not have ACS, and overtesting generates billions in unnecessary healthcare spending annually.
High-sensitivity troponin (hs-cTn) assays have transformed chest pain evaluation by enabling accelerated diagnostic protocols (0/1-hour or 0/3-hour algorithms) that can safely discharge low-risk patients within hours. Failure to follow validated protocols leads to both missed MI (2% of ED-discharged MIs result in litigation, with average settlements >$500,000) and excessive observation admissions. This skill provides a systematic framework for chest pain evaluation, troponin interpretation, and disposition decision-making.
Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)
- What is the character, onset, and duration of chest pain? (Default: document using OLDCARTS)
- What is the 12-lead ECG result and time of acquisition? (Default: obtain within 10 minutes of arrival)
- What is the initial troponin value, assay type, and draw time? (Default: document conventional vs. hs-cTn and time relative to symptom onset)
- What are the patient's cardiac risk factors? (Default: HTN, DM, hyperlipidemia, smoking, family hx, obesity, prior CAD)
- What is the HEART score? (Default: calculate and document all 5 components)
- Is there a prior cardiac history (prior MI, stent, CABG, stress test, cath)? (Default: query and document dates)
- Is the patient on anticoagulants or antiplatelets? (Default: document all antiplatelet and anticoagulant medications)
- Are there signs of hemodynamic instability? (Default: assess HR, BP, SpO2, signs of shock)
Documents to Request
- 12-lead ECG (obtain immediately; serial ECGs if ongoing symptoms)
- Prior ECGs for comparison
- Initial and serial troponin values with draw times
- Chest X-ray (portable AP)
- Prior cardiac catheterization reports
- Prior stress test or coronary CTA results
- Complete medication list
- Problem list with cardiac risk factors documented
Step 1: Initial Assessment and STEMI Screening
Immediate Actions (within 10 minutes of arrival)
- 12-lead ECG acquired and interpreted
- Continuous cardiac monitoring initiated
- IV access established
- Initial troponin drawn (document exact time relative to pain onset)
- Aspirin 324 mg chewed (if no contraindication)
STEMI Identification
STEMI criteria (≥2 contiguous leads):
- ST elevation ≥1 mm limb leads
- ST elevation ≥2 mm V2-V3 (men ≥40), ≥2.5 mm (men <40), ≥1.5 mm (women)
STEMI equivalents requiring cath lab activation:
- New LBBB with positive Sgarbossa or Smith-modified Sgarbossa
- de Winter T-wave pattern (upsloping ST depression + hyperacute T waves in V1-V6)
- Posterior MI (ST depression V1-V3 with tall R; confirm with V7-V9)
- Diffuse ST depression with ST elevation in aVR (left main/severe 3-vessel)
If STEMI or equivalent identified:
- Activate cath lab immediately (target door-to-balloon ≤90 minutes)
- Administer: aspirin 324 mg, heparin bolus per protocol, P2Y12 inhibitor per cardiology preference
- Avoid: nitroglycerin if RV involvement (check V4R), SBP <90, PDE5 inhibitor within 24-48 hours
Step 2: Non-STEMI Risk Stratification
For patients without STEMI on initial ECG, proceed with risk stratification:
HEART Score Calculation
| Component | 0 | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| History | Slightly suspicious | Moderately suspicious | Highly suspicious |
| ECG | Normal | Non-specific changes | Significant ST deviation |
| Age | <45 | 45-64 | ≥65 |
| Risk factors | None | 1-2 | ≥3 or known atherosclerosis |
| Troponin | ≤ normal | 1-3× normal | >3× normal |
Risk-Based Pathway Selection
| HEART Score | Category | Protocol |
|---|---|---|
| 0-3 | Low risk | Accelerated diagnostic protocol: 0/3h troponins; if both negative + non-ischemic ECG → discharge |
| 4-6 | Moderate risk | Observation: serial troponins, telemetry, consider stress test or CCTA before disposition |
| 7-10 | High risk | Admission + cardiology consult; likely invasive strategy |
Step 3: Troponin Interpretation and Serial Testing
High-Sensitivity Troponin (hs-cTn) Protocols
0/1-Hour Algorithm (ESC 2020):
| Scenario | Criteria | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Rule out | hs-cTn very low at 0h (<5 ng/L) AND symptoms >3h ago | Discharge (NPV >99.5%) |
| Rule out | hs-cTn low at 0h AND delta <3 ng/L at 1h | Discharge |
| Rule in | hs-cTn elevated at 0h (≥52 ng/L) OR delta ≥5 ng/L at 1h | Admit, cardiology consult |
| Observe | Neither rule-out nor rule-in criteria met | Serial testing at 3h, consider observation |
0/3-Hour Algorithm (alternative):
- 0h and 3h troponin both below 99th percentile with delta <50% → rule out
- Either elevated or significant rise → rule in
Conventional Troponin Protocol
- Initial troponin at presentation
- Repeat at 3 hours and 6 hours from symptom onset
- Both negative with low pre-test probability → discharge
- Elevation above 99th percentile → admission
Common Troponin Pitfalls
- Early presenters (<2h from onset): Troponin may not yet be detectable — serial testing mandatory
- Troponin elevation ≠ MI: Causes of non-ACS troponin elevation include PE, heart failure, myocarditis, sepsis, renal failure, tachyarrhythmia, Takotsubo
- Type 1 vs. Type 2 MI: Type 1 = plaque rupture; Type 2 = supply/demand mismatch (tachycardia, anemia, hypotension) — treatment differs fundamentally
Step 4: Non-ACS Causes of Chest Pain to Rule Out
Before attributing chest pain to a non-cardiac cause, actively exclude:
| Diagnosis | Key Features | Immediate Test |
|---|---|---|
| Pulmonary embolism | Pleuritic, dyspnea, DVT signs, tachycardia | Wells → D-dimer or CTA |
| Aortic dissection | Tearing, radiating to back, BP differential >20 mmHg between arms, pulse deficit | CTA aorta |
| Tension pneumothorax | Unilateral absent breath sounds, tracheal deviation, hypotension | Needle decompression (clinical diagnosis) |
| Esophageal rupture (Boerhaave) | Post-emesis, subcutaneous emphysema, mediastinal air | CT chest with PO contrast |
| Cardiac tamponade | Beck's triad (hypotension, JVD, muffled heart sounds), pulsus paradoxus | Bedside echo → pericardiocentesis |
Step 5: Disposition and Discharge Planning
Safe Discharge Criteria (all must be met)
- HEART score 0-3
- Serial troponins negative (both below 99th percentile with no significant delta)
- Non-ischemic ECG (no ST changes, no new T-wave inversions)
- Hemodynamically stable
- Symptoms resolved or clearly non-cardiac etiology identified
- Reliable follow-up within 72 hours available
Discharge Instructions Must Include
- Specific diagnosis or working diagnosis documented
- Medication changes (aspirin, statin, nitroglycerin if prescribed)
- Return precautions: "Return immediately if chest pain recurs, becomes more severe, is accompanied by shortness of breath, sweating, or arm/jaw pain"
- Follow-up appointment with PCP or cardiologist within 72 hours
- Activity restrictions if applicable
- Smoking cessation counseling if smoker (Joint Commission core measure)
Observation / Admission Criteria
- HEART score 4-6: observation with serial troponins + functional testing
- HEART score ≥7: inpatient admission with cardiology consult
- Any positive troponin: admission (even if HEART score is low)
- Dynamic ECG changes: admission regardless of troponin
- Hemodynamic instability: ICU admission
Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)
- Was a 12-lead ECG obtained within 10 minutes and interpreted for STEMI criteria and equivalents?
- Was the HEART score calculated with all 5 component values documented?
- Were troponin results interpreted with appropriate timing relative to symptom onset?
- Were non-ACS dangerous diagnoses (PE, dissection, pneumothorax, tamponade) actively considered?
- Does the disposition (discharge, observation, admission) align with the risk stratification results?
Quality Audit
- ECG obtained within 10 minutes of arrival and documented
- HEART score calculated with all component values listed
- Initial troponin draw time documented relative to symptom onset
- Serial troponin protocol followed with appropriate timing intervals
- STEMI criteria evaluated including equivalents (Sgarbossa, de Winter, posterior)
- Non-ACS life threats actively considered (PE, dissection, pneumothorax, tamponade)
- Aspirin administered (or contraindication documented)
- Troponin assay type specified (conventional vs. high-sensitivity)
- Type 1 vs. Type 2 MI differentiated if troponin elevated
- Disposition aligns with HEART score risk category
- Discharge instructions include specific return precautions for ACS symptoms
- Follow-up arranged within 72 hours for discharged patients
- Shared decision-making documented for borderline cases
- Smoking cessation counseling documented if applicable (Joint Commission measure)
Guidelines
- Never discharge a chest pain patient without at least one troponin result — if troponin is drawn <2 hours from symptom onset, a second troponin is mandatory before safe discharge.
- A normal ECG does not rule out ACS — sensitivity of a single ECG is only 45-60% for acute MI; serial ECGs are indicated for ongoing symptoms.
- Apply the HEART score as a structured framework, not a rigid cutoff — a patient with a HEART score of 3 who "looks sick" clinically warrants further evaluation regardless of the number.
- Document the troponin assay type (conventional vs. high-sensitivity) — the interpretation thresholds and timing protocols differ fundamentally between assay types.
- Always check right-sided leads (V4R) in inferior STEMI — RV infarction changes management (volume instead of nitroglycerin, avoid preload reducers).
- Aortic dissection is the chest pain diagnosis most commonly missed in the ED — maintain high suspicion for tearing/ripping pain radiating to the back, especially with hypertension or connective tissue disease history.
- Troponin elevation in the context of tachycardia, sepsis, or renal failure is likely Type 2 MI or non-ischemic elevation — treatment is directed at the underlying cause, not antiplatelet/anticoagulant therapy.
- The HEART Pathway (HEART score + serial troponins + ECG) has been validated to safely identify <1% MACE risk patients for early discharge — this is the evidence base for accelerated diagnostic protocols.