Yes there is. But the chest pain and brady may well be the first indicators of his infarct and that's the worry and the point. We don't want him to become haemodynamically unstable. But he is already (at least on the balance of probabilities) heading in that direction. Not good.
Yes he may be having an infarct, However, the chest pain was reduced from 7-3 with the "over the counter" Nitro, he doesn't have any significant ST changes ( although, of course a NSTEMI is possible), and has had the chest pain for at least 30mins (enough time to finish his workout and return home). Besides the slight bradycardia and chest pain there is no indication of impending haemodynamical collapse. For all we know the 48 may be his normal heart rate, although you strangely argue that his normal resting heart rate is irrelevent.
And he does already have a compromised perfusion state. BP might be one of the big perfusion quantifiers but don't underestimate others at the same time. At the very least technically, he's getting a B+ for perfusion. And the brady may well be nothing to do with the pain. A guy at 45, even somebody as unfit as me could well tolerate a HR of 48 without getting ischaemic mainly because all my other compensatory mechanisms still work ( I hope!!!). If I keep my BP because my smoking hasn't completely clogged all my arteries then I should be OK - for now. But the brady may well be arrhythmic as well. As inferior STEMI's go.
Where is the evidence its an inferior STEMI?
But this guy now has multi system and multi symptom involvement - has serious pain (a neuro response - maybe dermatome 4?)), skin perfusion changes (skin), a drop in his HR (CVS), feels decidedly unwell and all in the setting of physical exertion ( has really loaded up his myocardium just thr right time to expose any inherent weaknesses like clogged coronaries!!), his age and gender and other risk factors.
Pain is a always a warning sign of injury. And his haemodynamic status can change - really quickly if he's infarcting.
...and even faster if the bradycardia is a protective mechanism of the infarct. In an Infarcting heart there is always the risk that an increase in myocardial oxygen demand can increase the size of the infarct.
I'm still happy to try a cardiac meds regime and work the brady as well. Oh; and by the way his HR being 48/min, at least in my guidelines, GTN is out - contraindicated for HR<60/min. So all you guys who mentioned nitro - does this change your thoughts on treating this guy?
A good point, Nitro may be contraindicated in this pt, but that doesn't mean he should automatically be given atropine. Again, if his resting heart rate is normally slow, I may give Nitro. However, I would certainly give a drug that is proven to increase outcomes in MI-ASA.
What does he get now? Aspirin - good stuff all round, O2 (no benefit really if his SPo2's are 100%) IV, Morph - ohhhh.....careful with that brady and a stretcher. We've lost one one of our first line cardiac trump cards - the GTN, the morph carries risks and we don't want to use the Atropine. Yep?
Really, SATS of 100% and you think the pt may be having an MI, but 02 is of no benefit? I probably wouldn't give the morph- but again, this all rests on what the pts normal heart rate is, something that you have dismissed as unimportant. As far my Tx:
02 4LPM via N/C, ASA 320mg PO, IV- bolus of NaCl 250ml, Nitro 0.4mg SLx1- reasess Vitals pain, serial 12 leads, Patch to hosp
No offence intended to anyone. Just fluffing around a bit at the edges.