Cardiovascular Nursing • NCLEX-RN • PPT-Style Notes

Angina Nursing Presentation

A high-yield NCLEX cardiovascular lesson covering angina pathophysiology, types, assessment findings, medication safety, nursing priorities, patient teaching, and emergency red flags.

Learning Objectives

Understand

Explain why angina occurs when myocardial oxygen demand becomes greater than oxygen supply.

Differentiate

Compare stable, unstable, and variant angina using triggers, relief, and danger level.

Apply

Use NCLEX priority principles to manage chest pain, nitroglycerin safety, and emergency red flags.

What Is Angina?

Simple Definition

Angina is chest pain caused by myocardial ischemia. It happens when the heart muscle does not receive enough oxygen-rich blood.

The Main Problem

The key issue is an imbalance: oxygen demand is greater than oxygen supply. The heart needs more oxygen, but narrowed coronary arteries cannot deliver enough.

Memory Line

Angina is the heart saying: “I need more oxygen, but I am not getting enough.”

!

Main Cause: Atherosclerosis

The most common cause of angina is atherosclerosis, where fatty plaque builds up inside the coronary arteries.

1. Plaque Builds Up

Fatty deposits narrow the coronary arteries.

2. Flow Decreases

Less blood reaches the myocardium.

3. Ischemia Happens

Less oxygen delivery causes myocardial ischemia and chest pain.

Simple NCLEX Line
Plaque blocks flow → heart gets less oxygen → angina happens.

Angina vs Myocardial Infarction

Feature Angina Myocardial Infarction
Problem Temporary ischemia Prolonged ischemia
Heart Muscle Usually reversible Tissue death occurs
Troponin Usually negative Positive
Pain Relief May improve with rest or nitroglycerin May not improve with rest or nitroglycerin
Priority Reduce workload and monitor Emergency intervention needed

Golden Memory

Angina is a warning. MI is damage.

3

Types of Angina

Stable Angina

The predictable one. Occurs with exercise, stress, activity, or increased workload. Improves with rest or nitroglycerin.

Stable = same pattern, same trigger, same relief.

Unstable Angina

The dangerous one. May occur at rest, with minimal activity, more frequently, more severely, or for a longer duration.

Unstable = emergency until proven otherwise.

Variant Angina

Also called Prinzmetal angina. Caused by coronary artery spasm and may occur at rest, at night, or early morning.

Variant = vessel spasm.

Super Easy Comparison

Type Trigger Relief Danger Level
Stable Exertion or stress Rest or nitroglycerin Lower
Unstable Rest or minimal activity May not relieve High
Variant Spasm or rest Nitroglycerin or calcium channel blocker Variable

Memory

Stable = predictable. Unstable = unpredictable. Variant = vasospasm.

Risk Factors

Non-Modifiable

  • Age
  • Sex
  • Family history

Modifiable

  • Smoking
  • Hypertension
  • High cholesterol
  • Diabetes
  • Obesity
  • Physical inactivity
  • Poor diet
  • Chronic kidney disease
NCLEX Loves This
Focus teaching on modifiable risk factors because these are the areas nursing education can improve.

Clinical Manifestations

Classic Symptoms

  • Substernal chest pain
  • Chest pressure or tightness
  • Shortness of breath
  • Pain radiating to jaw, shoulder, or arm
  • Worse with exertion
  • Better with rest or nitroglycerin

Patient May Say

  • “It feels like pressure.”
  • “It feels heavy.”
  • “It feels tight.”
  • “It goes to my left arm.”
?

Atypical Symptoms

Atypical symptoms are especially important in elderly clients, diabetic clients, and sometimes female clients. They may not describe classic chest pain.

GI-Like

Nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain, or indigestion feeling.

Weakness-Like

Fatigue, dizziness, syncope, or severe weakness.

Autonomic/Respiratory

Sweating and shortness of breath.

NCLEX Trap
A diabetic client may report weakness, nausea, sweating, epigastric discomfort, and shortness of breath. Think myocardial ischemia or ACS.
L

Typical Angina Rule

Location

Substernal chest discomfort.

Trigger

Triggered by exertion or stress.

Relief

Relieved by rest or nitroglycerin.

Interpretation
3/3 = typical angina. 2/3 = atypical angina. 0/3 = non-anginal pain.
ECG

Diagnosis

ECG

May show ST depression, T-wave inversion, or transient ST elevation in variant angina. A normal ECG does not completely rule out angina.

Troponin

Troponin indicates myocardial injury. Angina is usually negative; MI is positive.

Stress Test

Used when stable angina is suspected. It checks how the heart responds to exercise.

Coronary Angiogram

Shows coronary artery narrowing or blockage and may lead to PCI or stent placement.

Simple Line

Troponin positive = heart muscle damage.

1

Nursing Priority

The priority is always to improve oxygen supply and decrease oxygen demand.

First Actions

  • Stop activity
  • Place client at rest
  • Assess vital signs
  • Check oxygen saturation

Cardiac Assessment

  • Obtain ECG
  • Assess pain characteristics
  • Monitor blood pressure
  • Watch for unstable symptoms

Interventions

  • Give nitroglycerin as ordered
  • Notify provider if pain continues
  • Prepare for ACS management if unstable
NCLEX Line
Chest pain means stop activity first. Do not keep the patient walking, send them to the bathroom, or delay assessment.
Rx

Nitroglycerin Safety

What It Does

Nitroglycerin causes vasodilation. This decreases preload, cardiac workload, and myocardial oxygen demand. It also helps improve coronary blood flow.

How to Give

Usually given as a sublingual tablet or spray. Common NCLEX rule: 1 dose every 5 minutes, up to 3 doses.

Expected Side Effects

  • Headache
  • Flushing
  • Dizziness
  • Hypotension

Safety Teaching

  • Sit or lie down before taking it
  • Do not swallow sublingual tablet
  • Let it dissolve under the tongue
  • Store in original dark bottle
  • Seek help if pain is not relieved

Nitro Memory

Nitro drops pressure, so sit down before you take it. Headache is expected.

+

Medication Safety Review

1

Beta Blockers

Decrease heart rate, contractility, and blood pressure. This lowers myocardial oxygen demand.

Examples: Metoprolol, Atenolol, Propranolol.

2

Calcium Channel Blockers

Relax vessels, dilate coronary arteries, and reduce workload. Very useful for variant angina.

Examples: Amlodipine, Nifedipine, Diltiazem, Verapamil.

3

Antiplatelets

Prevent platelets from sticking together and reduce MI risk.

Examples: Aspirin, Clopidogrel.

4

Anticoagulants

Prevent new clots and bigger clots. They do not dissolve existing clots.

Examples: Heparin, Warfarin.

5

ACE Inhibitors / ARBs

Lower blood pressure and afterload, reducing the pressure the heart pumps against.

Examples: Lisinopril, Enalapril, Captopril, Losartan.

911

When to Seek Emergency Help

Danger Signs

  • Chest pain at rest
  • New, severe, or worsening chest pain
  • Pain not relieved by nitroglycerin
  • Pain radiating to jaw, arm, shoulder, or back

Associated Red Flags

  • Sweating
  • Shortness of breath
  • Fainting
  • Severe weakness
NCLEX Line
Unrelieved chest pain is not stable angina. Treat it as acute coronary syndrome.

Final NCLEX Memory Section

Angina Types

  • Stable: exertion, predictable, relieved by rest/nitro.
  • Unstable: rest pain, unpredictable, emergency, may become MI.
  • Variant: vasospasm, rest pain, transient ST elevation.

Medication Memory

  • Nitro: vasodilates; headache expected; check BP.
  • Beta blockers: decrease oxygen demand.
  • CCBs: relax vessels; great for spasms.
  • Troponin positive: myocardial damage.

Golden NCLEX Line

Angina is the heart’s warning sign that oxygen supply is not meeting oxygen demand. The nurse’s job is to reduce workload, improve oxygenation, relieve pain, and prevent MI.

Continue Learning

After reviewing this presentation, students should read the detailed Angina notes and then attempt the 30-question NCLEX practice quiz.

Cardiovascular Nursing • NCLEX-RN • PPT-Style Notes

Angina Nursing Presentation

A high-yield NCLEX cardiovascular lesson covering angina pathophysiology, types, assessment findings, medication safety, nursing priorities, patient teaching, and emergency red flags.

Learning Objectives

Understand

Explain why angina occurs when myocardial oxygen demand becomes greater than oxygen supply.

Differentiate

Compare stable, unstable, and variant angina using triggers, relief, and danger level.

Apply

Use NCLEX priority principles to manage chest pain, nitroglycerin safety, and emergency red flags.

What Is Angina?

Simple Definition

Angina is chest pain caused by myocardial ischemia. It happens when the heart muscle does not receive enough oxygen-rich blood.

The Main Problem

The key issue is an imbalance: oxygen demand is greater than oxygen supply. The heart needs more oxygen, but narrowed coronary arteries cannot deliver enough.

Memory Line

Angina is the heart saying: “I need more oxygen, but I am not getting enough.”

!

Main Cause: Atherosclerosis

The most common cause of angina is atherosclerosis, where fatty plaque builds up inside the coronary arteries.

1. Plaque Builds Up

Fatty deposits narrow the coronary arteries.

2. Flow Decreases

Less blood reaches the myocardium.

3. Ischemia Happens

Less oxygen delivery causes myocardial ischemia and chest pain.

Simple NCLEX Line
Plaque blocks flow → heart gets less oxygen → angina happens.

Angina vs Myocardial Infarction

Feature Angina Myocardial Infarction
Problem Temporary ischemia Prolonged ischemia
Heart Muscle Usually reversible Tissue death occurs
Troponin Usually negative Positive
Pain Relief May improve with rest or nitroglycerin May not improve with rest or nitroglycerin
Priority Reduce workload and monitor Emergency intervention needed

Golden Memory

Angina is a warning. MI is damage.

3

Types of Angina

Stable Angina

The predictable one. Occurs with exercise, stress, activity, or increased workload. Improves with rest or nitroglycerin.

Stable = same pattern, same trigger, same relief.

Unstable Angina

The dangerous one. May occur at rest, with minimal activity, more frequently, more severely, or for a longer duration.

Unstable = emergency until proven otherwise.

Variant Angina

Also called Prinzmetal angina. Caused by coronary artery spasm and may occur at rest, at night, or early morning.

Variant = vessel spasm.

Super Easy Comparison

Type Trigger Relief Danger Level
Stable Exertion or stress Rest or nitroglycerin Lower
Unstable Rest or minimal activity May not relieve High
Variant Spasm or rest Nitroglycerin or calcium channel blocker Variable

Memory

Stable = predictable. Unstable = unpredictable. Variant = vasospasm.

Risk Factors

Non-Modifiable

  • Age
  • Sex
  • Family history

Modifiable

  • Smoking
  • Hypertension
  • High cholesterol
  • Diabetes
  • Obesity
  • Physical inactivity
  • Poor diet
  • Chronic kidney disease
NCLEX Loves This
Focus teaching on modifiable risk factors because these are the areas nursing education can improve.

Clinical Manifestations

Classic Symptoms

  • Substernal chest pain
  • Chest pressure or tightness
  • Shortness of breath
  • Pain radiating to jaw, shoulder, or arm
  • Worse with exertion
  • Better with rest or nitroglycerin

Patient May Say

  • “It feels like pressure.”
  • “It feels heavy.”
  • “It feels tight.”
  • “It goes to my left arm.”
?

Atypical Symptoms

Atypical symptoms are especially important in elderly clients, diabetic clients, and sometimes female clients. They may not describe classic chest pain.

GI-Like

Nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain, or indigestion feeling.

Weakness-Like

Fatigue, dizziness, syncope, or severe weakness.

Autonomic/Respiratory

Sweating and shortness of breath.

NCLEX Trap
A diabetic client may report weakness, nausea, sweating, epigastric discomfort, and shortness of breath. Think myocardial ischemia or ACS.
L

Typical Angina Rule

Location

Substernal chest discomfort.

Trigger

Triggered by exertion or stress.

Relief

Relieved by rest or nitroglycerin.

Interpretation
3/3 = typical angina. 2/3 = atypical angina. 0/3 = non-anginal pain.
ECG

Diagnosis

ECG

May show ST depression, T-wave inversion, or transient ST elevation in variant angina. A normal ECG does not completely rule out angina.

Troponin

Troponin indicates myocardial injury. Angina is usually negative; MI is positive.

Stress Test

Used when stable angina is suspected. It checks how the heart responds to exercise.

Coronary Angiogram

Shows coronary artery narrowing or blockage and may lead to PCI or stent placement.

Simple Line

Troponin positive = heart muscle damage.

1

Nursing Priority

The priority is always to improve oxygen supply and decrease oxygen demand.

First Actions

  • Stop activity
  • Place client at rest
  • Assess vital signs
  • Check oxygen saturation

Cardiac Assessment

  • Obtain ECG
  • Assess pain characteristics
  • Monitor blood pressure
  • Watch for unstable symptoms

Interventions

  • Give nitroglycerin as ordered
  • Notify provider if pain continues
  • Prepare for ACS management if unstable
NCLEX Line
Chest pain means stop activity first. Do not keep the patient walking, send them to the bathroom, or delay assessment.
Rx

Nitroglycerin Safety

What It Does

Nitroglycerin causes vasodilation. This decreases preload, cardiac workload, and myocardial oxygen demand. It also helps improve coronary blood flow.

How to Give

Usually given as a sublingual tablet or spray. Common NCLEX rule: 1 dose every 5 minutes, up to 3 doses.

Expected Side Effects

  • Headache
  • Flushing
  • Dizziness
  • Hypotension

Safety Teaching

  • Sit or lie down before taking it
  • Do not swallow sublingual tablet
  • Let it dissolve under the tongue
  • Store in original dark bottle
  • Seek help if pain is not relieved

Nitro Memory

Nitro drops pressure, so sit down before you take it. Headache is expected.

+

Medication Safety Review

1

Beta Blockers

Decrease heart rate, contractility, and blood pressure. This lowers myocardial oxygen demand.

Examples: Metoprolol, Atenolol, Propranolol.

2

Calcium Channel Blockers

Relax vessels, dilate coronary arteries, and reduce workload. Very useful for variant angina.

Examples: Amlodipine, Nifedipine, Diltiazem, Verapamil.

3

Antiplatelets

Prevent platelets from sticking together and reduce MI risk.

Examples: Aspirin, Clopidogrel.

4

Anticoagulants

Prevent new clots and bigger clots. They do not dissolve existing clots.

Examples: Heparin, Warfarin.

5

ACE Inhibitors / ARBs

Lower blood pressure and afterload, reducing the pressure the heart pumps against.

Examples: Lisinopril, Enalapril, Captopril, Losartan.

911

When to Seek Emergency Help

Danger Signs

  • Chest pain at rest
  • New, severe, or worsening chest pain
  • Pain not relieved by nitroglycerin
  • Pain radiating to jaw, arm, shoulder, or back

Associated Red Flags

  • Sweating
  • Shortness of breath
  • Fainting
  • Severe weakness
NCLEX Line
Unrelieved chest pain is not stable angina. Treat it as acute coronary syndrome.

Final NCLEX Memory Section

Angina Types

  • Stable: exertion, predictable, relieved by rest/nitro.
  • Unstable: rest pain, unpredictable, emergency, may become MI.
  • Variant: vasospasm, rest pain, transient ST elevation.

Medication Memory

  • Nitro: vasodilates; headache expected; check BP.
  • Beta blockers: decrease oxygen demand.
  • CCBs: relax vessels; great for spasms.
  • Troponin positive: myocardial damage.

Golden NCLEX Line

Angina is the heart’s warning sign that oxygen supply is not meeting oxygen demand. The nurse’s job is to reduce workload, improve oxygenation, relieve pain, and prevent MI.

Continue Learning

After reviewing this presentation, students should read the detailed Angina notes and then attempt the 30-question NCLEX practice quiz.

Cardiovascular Nursing • NCLEX-RN • PPT-Style Notes

Angina Nursing Presentation

A high-yield NCLEX cardiovascular lesson covering angina pathophysiology, types, assessment findings, medication safety, nursing priorities, patient teaching, and emergency red flags.

Learning Objectives

Understand

Explain why angina occurs when myocardial oxygen demand becomes greater than oxygen supply.

Differentiate

Compare stable, unstable, and variant angina using triggers, relief, and danger level.

Apply

Use NCLEX priority principles to manage chest pain, nitroglycerin safety, and emergency red flags.

What Is Angina?

Simple Definition

Angina is chest pain caused by myocardial ischemia. It happens when the heart muscle does not receive enough oxygen-rich blood.

The Main Problem

The key issue is an imbalance: oxygen demand is greater than oxygen supply. The heart needs more oxygen, but narrowed coronary arteries cannot deliver enough.

Memory Line

Angina is the heart saying: “I need more oxygen, but I am not getting enough.”

!

Main Cause: Atherosclerosis

The most common cause of angina is atherosclerosis, where fatty plaque builds up inside the coronary arteries.

1. Plaque Builds Up

Fatty deposits narrow the coronary arteries.

2. Flow Decreases

Less blood reaches the myocardium.

3. Ischemia Happens

Less oxygen delivery causes myocardial ischemia and chest pain.

Simple NCLEX Line
Plaque blocks flow → heart gets less oxygen → angina happens.

Angina vs Myocardial Infarction

Feature Angina Myocardial Infarction
Problem Temporary ischemia Prolonged ischemia
Heart Muscle Usually reversible Tissue death occurs
Troponin Usually negative Positive
Pain Relief May improve with rest or nitroglycerin May not improve with rest or nitroglycerin
Priority Reduce workload and monitor Emergency intervention needed

Golden Memory

Angina is a warning. MI is damage.

3

Types of Angina

Stable Angina

The predictable one. Occurs with exercise, stress, activity, or increased workload. Improves with rest or nitroglycerin.

Stable = same pattern, same trigger, same relief.

Unstable Angina

The dangerous one. May occur at rest, with minimal activity, more frequently, more severely, or for a longer duration.

Unstable = emergency until proven otherwise.

Variant Angina

Also called Prinzmetal angina. Caused by coronary artery spasm and may occur at rest, at night, or early morning.

Variant = vessel spasm.

Super Easy Comparison

Type Trigger Relief Danger Level
Stable Exertion or stress Rest or nitroglycerin Lower
Unstable Rest or minimal activity May not relieve High
Variant Spasm or rest Nitroglycerin or calcium channel blocker Variable

Memory

Stable = predictable. Unstable = unpredictable. Variant = vasospasm.

Risk Factors

Non-Modifiable

  • Age
  • Sex
  • Family history

Modifiable

  • Smoking
  • Hypertension
  • High cholesterol
  • Diabetes
  • Obesity
  • Physical inactivity
  • Poor diet
  • Chronic kidney disease
NCLEX Loves This
Focus teaching on modifiable risk factors because these are the areas nursing education can improve.

Clinical Manifestations

Classic Symptoms

  • Substernal chest pain
  • Chest pressure or tightness
  • Shortness of breath
  • Pain radiating to jaw, shoulder, or arm
  • Worse with exertion
  • Better with rest or nitroglycerin

Patient May Say

  • “It feels like pressure.”
  • “It feels heavy.”
  • “It feels tight.”
  • “It goes to my left arm.”
?

Atypical Symptoms

Atypical symptoms are especially important in elderly clients, diabetic clients, and sometimes female clients. They may not describe classic chest pain.

GI-Like

Nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain, or indigestion feeling.

Weakness-Like

Fatigue, dizziness, syncope, or severe weakness.

Autonomic/Respiratory

Sweating and shortness of breath.

NCLEX Trap
A diabetic client may report weakness, nausea, sweating, epigastric discomfort, and shortness of breath. Think myocardial ischemia or ACS.
L

Typical Angina Rule

Location

Substernal chest discomfort.

Trigger

Triggered by exertion or stress.

Relief

Relieved by rest or nitroglycerin.

Interpretation
3/3 = typical angina. 2/3 = atypical angina. 0/3 = non-anginal pain.
ECG

Diagnosis

ECG

May show ST depression, T-wave inversion, or transient ST elevation in variant angina. A normal ECG does not completely rule out angina.

Troponin

Troponin indicates myocardial injury. Angina is usually negative; MI is positive.

Stress Test

Used when stable angina is suspected. It checks how the heart responds to exercise.

Coronary Angiogram

Shows coronary artery narrowing or blockage and may lead to PCI or stent placement.

Simple Line

Troponin positive = heart muscle damage.

1

Nursing Priority

The priority is always to improve oxygen supply and decrease oxygen demand.

First Actions

  • Stop activity
  • Place client at rest
  • Assess vital signs
  • Check oxygen saturation

Cardiac Assessment

  • Obtain ECG
  • Assess pain characteristics
  • Monitor blood pressure
  • Watch for unstable symptoms

Interventions

  • Give nitroglycerin as ordered
  • Notify provider if pain continues
  • Prepare for ACS management if unstable
NCLEX Line
Chest pain means stop activity first. Do not keep the patient walking, send them to the bathroom, or delay assessment.
Rx

Nitroglycerin Safety

What It Does

Nitroglycerin causes vasodilation. This decreases preload, cardiac workload, and myocardial oxygen demand. It also helps improve coronary blood flow.

How to Give

Usually given as a sublingual tablet or spray. Common NCLEX rule: 1 dose every 5 minutes, up to 3 doses.

Expected Side Effects

  • Headache
  • Flushing
  • Dizziness
  • Hypotension

Safety Teaching

  • Sit or lie down before taking it
  • Do not swallow sublingual tablet
  • Let it dissolve under the tongue
  • Store in original dark bottle
  • Seek help if pain is not relieved

Nitro Memory

Nitro drops pressure, so sit down before you take it. Headache is expected.

+

Medication Safety Review

1

Beta Blockers

Decrease heart rate, contractility, and blood pressure. This lowers myocardial oxygen demand.

Examples: Metoprolol, Atenolol, Propranolol.

2

Calcium Channel Blockers

Relax vessels, dilate coronary arteries, and reduce workload. Very useful for variant angina.

Examples: Amlodipine, Nifedipine, Diltiazem, Verapamil.

3

Antiplatelets

Prevent platelets from sticking together and reduce MI risk.

Examples: Aspirin, Clopidogrel.

4

Anticoagulants

Prevent new clots and bigger clots. They do not dissolve existing clots.

Examples: Heparin, Warfarin.

5

ACE Inhibitors / ARBs

Lower blood pressure and afterload, reducing the pressure the heart pumps against.

Examples: Lisinopril, Enalapril, Captopril, Losartan.

911

When to Seek Emergency Help

Danger Signs

  • Chest pain at rest
  • New, severe, or worsening chest pain
  • Pain not relieved by nitroglycerin
  • Pain radiating to jaw, arm, shoulder, or back

Associated Red Flags

  • Sweating
  • Shortness of breath
  • Fainting
  • Severe weakness
NCLEX Line
Unrelieved chest pain is not stable angina. Treat it as acute coronary syndrome.

Final NCLEX Memory Section

Angina Types

  • Stable: exertion, predictable, relieved by rest/nitro.
  • Unstable: rest pain, unpredictable, emergency, may become MI.
  • Variant: vasospasm, rest pain, transient ST elevation.

Medication Memory

  • Nitro: vasodilates; headache expected; check BP.
  • Beta blockers: decrease oxygen demand.
  • CCBs: relax vessels; great for spasms.
  • Troponin positive: myocardial damage.

Golden NCLEX Line

Angina is the heart’s warning sign that oxygen supply is not meeting oxygen demand. The nurse’s job is to reduce workload, improve oxygenation, relieve pain, and prevent MI.

Continue Learning

After reviewing this presentation, students should read the detailed Angina notes and then attempt the 30-question NCLEX practice quiz.

View Angina PPT Presentation

Use the slide controls to move through the Angina nursing presentation directly on this page.

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