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Apex Nursing

Chart — Cardiac

ACS Comparison Chart

Side-by-side comparison of stable angina, unstable angina, NSTEMI, and STEMI — organized by ECG findings, troponin status, degree of coronary occlusion, urgency, and treatment priorities.

Educational use only. ACS management requires provider assessment and institutional protocols. This chart supports learning and NCLEX preparation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

ACS Spectrum Comparison

ConditionECG FindingsTroponinsCoronary OcclusionUrgency
Stable AnginaNormal at rest; transient ST depression with exertion; resolves with rest or NTGNormal — no myocardial necrosisNo occlusion — fixed stenosis limits blood flow during increased demand; no thrombusOutpatient evaluation — schedule stress testing, optimize medical management; not an emergency
Unstable Angina (UA)ST depression or T-wave changes possible; NO ST elevation; changes may be dynamicNormal — troponin NOT elevated. This is the key distinguishing feature from NSTEMIPartial — plaque rupture with non-occlusive thrombus; severely reduced flow without complete blockageUrgent inpatient admission — high risk for progression to MI; risk stratify with TIMI or GRACE score
NSTEMIST depression and/or T-wave inversion; NO ST elevation; may have non-specific changes or normal ECGELEVATED — rising and falling pattern with clinical symptoms confirms diagnosisNear-complete to partial — thrombus with residual flow; subendocardial necrosis (partial thickness)Emergent admission — catheterization within 24–72 hrs (high-risk: <24 hrs; low-risk: <72 hrs)
STEMIST elevation ≥1 mm in ≥2 contiguous leads; reciprocal ST depression in opposite leads; eventual Q wave developmentELEVATED — but do not wait for results; diagnosis and activation made on ECG aloneComplete — occlusive thrombus; no residual flow; transmural (full-thickness) myocardial necrosisIMMEDIATE EMERGENCY — activate cath lab now; door-to-balloon goal ≤90 min (PCI) or ≤30 min (thrombolytics)

Treatment Summary

Stable AnginaLong-acting nitrates, beta-blockers, CCBs, aspirin; revascularization if refractory
Unstable Angina (UA)Aspirin, P2Y12 inhibitor, heparin, beta-blocker; early invasive vs conservative based on risk
NSTEMIAspirin + P2Y12 inhibitor (DAPT), heparin, beta-blocker, statin; early invasive per risk score
STEMIImmediate reperfusion (PCI preferred); aspirin + P2Y12 inhibitor + heparin; morphine if refractory pain; avoid NTG in inferior STEMI with RV involvement

Key Differentiating Facts

FeatureStable AnginaUnstable AnginaNSTEMISTEMI
Troponin elevated?NoNoYesYes
ST elevation?NoNoNoYes
Complete occlusion?NoNoNo (partial)Yes
Myocardial necrosis?NoNoYes (partial)Yes (transmural)
Reperfusion needed?No (medical mgmt)No (risk-based)Yes (cath ≤24–72 hrs)Yes (immediate, ≤90 min)
PresentationExertional onlyRest, new onset, or crescendoRest pain with necrosisComplete occlusion — rest pain

NCLEX Pearls

  • UA vs NSTEMI: Both have no ST elevation, but NSTEMI has elevated troponin — UA does not.
  • STEMI diagnosis is made on ECG alone — do not wait for troponin results to activate protocol.
  • STEMI = complete occlusion → transmural infarction; NSTEMI = partial occlusion → subendocardial infarction.
  • New LBBB with ACS symptoms is treated as a STEMI equivalent — activate cath lab protocol.
  • Inferior STEMI: check right-sided ECG for RV infarct before giving nitroglycerin.
  • Door-to-balloon ≤90 min for PCI; ≤30 min for thrombolytics — time-critical for STEMI only.
  • All ACS types receive aspirin immediately — STEMI additionally needs immediate reperfusion.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with AHA / ACC ACS Guidelines. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →