Current management of unstable angina
Abstract
The patient with unstable angina (angina of recent onset, of changing pattern or occurring at rest) is at high risk of myocardial infarction and sudden death. Patients with simple angina of recent onset can generally be managed out of hospital. Those with progressive angina or angina at rest should be admitted to a coronary care unit, kept at bed-rest, and given propranolol and long-acting nitrates when such therapy is indicated. With these approaches the rate of infarction within 1 to 3 months after the onset of unstable angina is about 12% (as compared with 40% before 1970); the mortality in the same period is less than 2% (as compared with 17% before 1970), though during the first year it is about 17%, much higher than in patients with stable angina and in survivors of acute myocardial infarction.Urgent aortocoronary bypass grafting has proven to be unnecessary and probably undesirable for most patients with unstable angina, and is now generally reserved for patients who continue to have angina in hospital while receiving full medical therapy. The ongoing management of patients whose angina is controlled during the acute phase remains controversial. The main options are to operate on every possible patient, to operate only on those with certain distributions of coronary artery lesions, and to operate only on those who have recurrent symptoms. Further studies are required to delineate the etiology and the Optimal management of unstable angina.
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