Could there be a pt prescribed epi and nitro?
Yes. For example, someone with a history of an anaphylactic reaction who also has angina.
Say you come on a pt with anaphylactic shock and has a history of heart problems prescribed nitro, could he have chest pain with an anaphylactic reaction?
Sure. He/she could be hypotensive, resulting in a decreased oxygen supply to the myocardium, and anginal pain, or outright infarction.
and would you help adminsitor epi with a pt with heart probems and prescribed nitro?
As a paramedic, yes, but I would tend to the lower side of the dosing, probably 0.3mg versus 0.5mg. I would be even more hesitant than normal to give epinephrine IV.
This is a situation where the risk of causing an MI or an arrhythmia, or some other complication, with the epinephrine needs to be balanced against the danger of an untreated anaphylactic reaction.
would .3mg of epi cause so much vasoconstriction that it would cause a heart attack?
Yes, it can. It could also cause an arrhythmia, or a CVA, or any number of other complications. And this is not just a risk in patients with prior diagnosed cardiac disease. But the risk is probably greater in these individuals than in the general population of patients without prior diagnosed cardiac disease.
Of course, all that matters is the risk in the individual patient you're treating, which may be difficult to determine beforehand, and the outcome of your care, which you can only find out afterwards.
my book says no contraindications for administering epi.
Well, that's your book giving an easy and simple answer to a potentially difficult and complicated question.
It is probably safe to say that in most life-threatening presentations of anaphylaxis giving the epinephrine is better than withholding in, even in the presence of significant prior cardiac disease.