Preoperative Cardiac Assessment: A Practical, Evidence-Based Guide for Clinicians
Preoperative cardiac assessment is a critical step in ensuring safe surgery. Cardiovascular complications remain a major cause of perioperative morbidity and mortality, especially in patients with known or suspected heart disease. A systematic, guideline-based approach helps clinicians stratify risk, optimize patients, and communicate effectively with surgical teams.
This article provides a practical, step-by-step framework based on current recommendations (ACC/AHA, ESC), written in simple, clinical language for quick application.
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🔍 Why Preoperative Cardiac Assessment Matters
Surgery induces physiologic stress (tachycardia, increased myocardial oxygen demand).
Anaesthesia can cause hypotension, arrhythmias, and mask symptoms.
Many patients with cardiovascular risk factors remain undiagnosed until exposed to perioperative stress.
A structured assessment helps:
✓ Identify high-risk patients
✓ Reduce avoidable cancellations
✓ Optimize outcomes through medical therapy or intervention
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1️⃣ Step 1: Determine Urgency of Surgery
🏥 Emergency
No time for extensive testing.
Stabilize life-threatening issues (e.g., arrhythmia, pulmonary edema).
Proceed to surgery with best possible medical management.
⏳ Time-sensitive (Urgent)
Limited optimization possible.
Perform focused assessment.
📅 Elective
Full workup possible.
Opportunity to adjust medications, perform tests, or treat unstable conditions.
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2️⃣ Step 2: Look for Active Cardiac Conditions (Must Be Stabilized First)
If present, postpone elective surgery and treat:
Unstable angina
Recent MI (<30 days)
Decompensated heart failure
Significant arrhythmias (AF with RVR, VT, complete heart block)
Severe valvular disease (critical AS, symptomatic MR/MS)
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3️⃣ Step 3: Assess Functional Capacity (METs)
Functional capacity is one of the strongest predictors of perioperative safety.
👉 Good (≥4 METs)
Patient can climb 2 flights of stairs, walk briskly, or perform normal housework.
Usually no further cardiac testing needed.
👉 Poor (<4 METs)
Limited exercise tolerance → higher risk.
Consider stress testing if surgery is high-risk.
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4️⃣ Step 4: Evaluate Surgery-Specific Cardiac Risk
Low Risk (<1%)
Cataract surgery
Superficial procedures
Minor orthopedic
→ No further testing.
Intermediate Risk (1–5%)
Intraperitoneal
Orthopedic major
Head & neck
Urologic
High Risk (>5%)
Major vascular surgery
Aortic or peripheral arterial
Prolonged or combined procedures
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5️⃣ Step 5: Review Patient-Specific Risk Factors
Age >70
CAD / prior MI
Heart failure
Stroke / TIA
Diabetes (especially insulin use)
CKD
Hypertension
Smoking / obesity
Use validated calculators:
RCRI (Revised Cardiac Risk Index), NSQIP, ACS Surgical Risk Calculator.
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6️⃣ Step 6: Decide Whether Noninvasive Testing Is Needed
Only do tests if results will change management.
💓 Stress Testing
Indicated when:
Functional capacity <4 METs and
Surgery is intermediate/high risk and
Patient has ≥1 clinical risk factor
Not indicated for low-risk surgery.
🩺 Echocardiography
Indications:
New or worsening dyspnea
Known HF with poor control
Known valvular disease with no echo in last 1 year
Murmur + symptoms
Not for routine screening.
📌 ECG
Indicated for:
Age >45–50
Known cardiac disease
Intermediate/high-risk surgery
🧪 Cardiac Biomarkers (BNP/NT-proBNP, Troponin)
Useful in:
Age >65
≥1 clinical risk factor
High-risk surgery
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7️⃣ Step 7: Optimize Medical Therapy
🩸 Beta-blockers
Continue if already prescribed.
Start only if strongly indicated; begin at least 1 week before surgery.
⚡ ACE inhibitors/ARBs
Hold morning of surgery to avoid hypotension (unless used for HF).
💊 Statins
Continue; consider starting for vascular surgery.
💉 Antiplatelets
Continue aspirin for high-risk CAD unless bleeding risk outweighs benefit.
Hold clopidogrel 5–7 days preop (unless recent stent).
💚 Heart Failure
Ensure euvolemia
Adjust diuretics carefully
Treat exacerbations before surgery
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8️⃣ Step 8: Special Conditions
Coronary Stents
Bare-metal stent: minimum 30 days before elective surgery
Drug-eluting stent:
Newer DES: minimum 3 months
Earlier-generation: 6 months
Valvular Disease
Severe AS requires evaluation ± TAVR/AVR before major surgery.
Severe MR/MS → optimize volume, consider echo.
Arrhythmias
Control rate in AF
Treat electrolyte abnormalities
Address syncope history
Heart Failure
One of the strongest predictors of perioperative events
Ensure maximally optimized GDMT
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9️⃣ Step 9: Perioperative Monitoring & Communication
For intermediate/high-risk patients → consider telemetry
If BNP/Troponin elevated → postoperative monitoring of troponins
Clear communication between cardiology, anesthesia, and surgery team is essential
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🔚 Key Takeaways
Not every patient needs testing — risk-driven approach saves time and avoids delays.
Stabilize active cardiac conditions before elective surgery.
Functional capacity (METs) remains the strongest predictor.
Most testing is unnecessary for low-risk surgeries.
Optimize medications, especially beta-blockers and statins.
Use objective tools (RCRI, NSQIP) to stratify risk.

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