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Review: Chest Pain: First Hour Triage (ACS + Can’t-Miss)

Tables and annotated figures become active recall.


title: "Chest Pain: First Hour Triage (ACS + Can’t-Miss)"

Chest Pain: First Hour Triage (ACS + Can’t-Miss)

Aim: don't miss the killers, stabilise physiology, and hand over a coherent plan. You don't need the perfect diagnosis in minute 5.

Warning

This is for medical education. In real clinical settings, follow local pathways, senior guidance, and your hospital's protocols.

Chest Pain: Can't-Miss Diagnoses

Rule out the killers • Escalate early if unstable • Repeat ECG if ongoing pain

ACS

Pressure/heaviness ± diaphoresis

Dynamic ECG changes • CAD risks

Aortic dissection

Sudden severe pain • "ripping" to back

Pulse/BP differential • neuro deficit

PE

Pleuritic pain + dyspnoea • tachycardia

Hypoxia • VTE risk factors

Tension PTX

Severe dyspnoea • unilateral absent sounds

Hypotension • tracheal deviation late

Tamponade

Shock + raised JVP (may be subtle)

Muffled sounds/pulsus paradoxus

Oesophageal rupture

Post-vomiting chest pain • toxicity

Subcutaneous emphysema

0–10 minutes: stabilise + data

DoWhy it matters
ABCDE + vitals + bedside impression“Sick vs not sick” is a real skill
ECG early (and repeat if ongoing pain)The first ECG can be normal early
IV access + bloods (incl. troponin as per pathway)Lets you trend risk, not guess
Analgesia + antiemeticPain drives sympathetic chaos
CXR when appropriatePneumo / pneumonia / mediastinum clues
Escalate early if unstableThe best junior move is calling sooner

A quick “can’t-miss” discriminator table

DiagnosisClues that should spike your concern
ACSPressure/heaviness ± diaphoresis/nausea, exertional, CAD risks, dynamic ECG changes
DissectionSudden severe pain, “ripping” to back, neuro deficit/syncope, pulse/BP differential
PEPleuritic pain + dyspnoea, tachycardia, hypoxia, risk factors (recent surgery/immobility)
Tension PTXSevere dyspnoea, unilateral absent breath sounds, hypotension, tracheal deviation late
TamponadeShock + raised JVP, muffled heart sounds (may be subtle), pulsus paradoxus
Oesophageal rupturePost-vomiting chest pain, systemic toxicity, subcutaneous emphysema

ECG: simple pattern buckets

Normal 12-lead ECG (baseline reference)LITFL ECG Library (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Pattern bucketThinkAction tendency
STEMI patternAcute occlusionEscalate for urgent reperfusion pathway
Ischaemia (non-STEMI/UA pattern)Demand/supply mismatchSerial ECG/troponin + risk stratification
Pericarditis-likePleuritic, positional painCheck for pericardial features and troponin
Normal/unchanged ECGDoesn’t exclude ACSTrend biomarkers + reassess trajectory

What to say when you call (make it easy to help you)

ISBAR one-line escalation for chest pain: identify, situation, background, assessment, request.

One-line escalation (ISBAR-ish)
  • Identify (I): "I'm ___ on ___, calling about ___ (age/sex)."
  • Situation (S): "Chest pain with ___ (instability/ECG change/troponin pending)."
  • Background (B): "Relevant risks / timing / key history."
  • Assessment (A): "RR __, SpO2 __ on __, HR __, BP __, temp __."
  • Request (R): "Can you review now / advise next test / start pathway?"