Lesson 1High-intensity statin initiation: timing, expected benefits, monitoring for adverse effectsExplains when and how to begin strong statins in possible heart attacks, hoped plaque steady benefits, starting labs, watch for muscle or liver harm, and advice for long stick-to-it.
Timing of statin start in heart pathPicking right statin and amountStarting liver and muscle checksWatch for muscle and liver harmPatient advice and stick-to-it helpLesson 2Oxygen therapy: evidence-based thresholds for use, titration to target SpO2, risks of hyperoxiaLooks at oxygen help in possible heart attacks, stressing proof-based start limits, adjust to goal oxygen level, avoid too much oxygen, and record needs and patient reply.
When to start oxygen in possible heart attackGoal oxygen level ranges and adjust stepsDangers and ways of too much oxygen harmDevice pick and flow changesWatch and record oxygen replyLesson 3Nitroglycerin: sublingual administration steps, hemodynamic checks, contraindications (PDE-5 inhibitors), management of hypotensionOutlines safe nitro use, including under-tongue steps, before and after blood flow checks, no-go like PDE-5 meds, and plans for low blood pressure from nitro.
Under-tongue nitro stepsBefore dose blood pressure and pain checksScreen for PDE-5 med useSpot nitro side effectsHandle and record low blood pressureLesson 4Aspirin: dosing, mechanism in ACS, contraindications, assessment before and after administrationGives focused look at aspirin in heart attacks, including load and keep doses, plate-stop way, no-go, and planned checks before and after for safety and work.
Aspirin load and keep dosingPlate stop way in heart attackNo-go and careful usesBefore dose check and risk screenAfter dose watch and recheckLesson 5Medication interaction and allergy checks: cross-checking home meds, diabetes and beta-blocker interactions, renal dosing considerationsCenters on steady find allergies, past bad replies, and high-risk med mixes, including sugar meds, beta-blockers, and kidney-cleared meds, to stop avoidable harm in heart patients.
Planned allergy and reply historyCross-check home and hospital medsSugar drugs and beta-blocker hideKidney dosing and harm combosUse record alerts and med expert helpLesson 6Overview of ACS pharmacotherapy: antiplatelets, anticoagulants, nitrates, beta-blockers, statins, oxygen rationaleLooks at main heart attack meds, their ways, needs, and no-go, stressing first choice, order, and bedside safety checks to balance blood lack relief with bleed and flow risks.
Roles of plate-stop agents in heart attackBlood thinner choices and pickUse nitrates for blood lack painEarly beta-blocker thinkStrong statins in heart careOxygen use and current heart proofLesson 7Anticoagulation with enoxaparin: dosing based on weight/renal function, timing relative to procedures, bleeding risk assessment and monitoringCovers enoxaparin for heart blood thinning, including weight and kidney dose, timing near body fixes, bleed risk check, watch plans, and team work with heart experts.
Weight-based dose countsKidney problem dose changesTiming with tube fix and other stepsStarting and ongoing bleed checkWatch anti-Xa and lab measuresUndo and handle big bleedLesson 8Beta-blockers (metoprolol): indications, IV vs PO use, blood pressure and heart rate criteria, dose titration and monitoring for bradycardiaLooks at metoprolol in heart attacks, including needs, pick IV or mouth route, blood pressure and heart rate limits, adjust plans, and watch for slow heart, low pressure, and breath tight.
Needs and no-go in heart attackIV vs mouth metoprolol pickBlood pressure and heart rate limitsDose adjust and recheckWatch for slow heart and low pressureLesson 9Documentation and communication with the provider about medication responses and lab-guided adjustmentsDetails best ways to record med needs, replies, and bad events, and talk with care givers to guide lab-based dose changes and care up or down steps.
Record needs and dose timeChart replies and side effectsShare key changes quickUse labs to guide dose changesHandoff reports and team notesLesson 10Monitoring for adverse effects: hypotension, bradycardia, bleeding, allergic reactions, and stepwise response algorithmsCovers early spot and handle low pressure, slow heart, bleed, and allergy replies after heart meds, using step plans, up triggers, and record of reply to steps.
Vital sign and flow watchBleed risk signs and bedside checksSpot med slow heartFind and treat allergy repliesStep reply and up pathsAfter event recheck and record