ACS MCQs (NEET-SS / DM Cardiology level)

ACS MCQs (NEET-SS / DM Cardiology level)

1. In a patient with chest pain of 90 minutes’ duration and persistent ST-elevation on ECG, the next best step is:

A. Immediate high-flow oxygen and observe
B. Immediate reperfusion (primary PCI if available)
C. Start thrombolysis only if symptoms >12 hours
D. Start IV beta-blocker and wait for troponin
STEMI with ongoing ischemia requires immediate reperfusionโ€”primary PCI is preferred when timely.

2. Which of the following is an absolute contraindication to fibrinolysis?

A. Uncontrolled hypertension (BP >180/110)
B. Recent major surgery within 3 months
C. Prior intracranial hemorrhage
D. Active peptic ulcer disease
Prior ICH is an absolute contraindication to thrombolysis due to high risk of catastrophic bleeding.

3. Door-to-balloon time target recommended for primary PCI is:

A. โ‰ค 30 minutes
B. โ‰ค 90 minutes
C. โ‰ค 180 minutes
D. โ‰ค 240 minutes
Guidelines recommend door-to-balloon within 90 minutes to improve outcomes.

4. A 68-year-old with inferior STEMI is hypotensive. Which statement is correct regarding nitrates?

A. Nitrates should be avoided if RV infarction suspected
B. IV nitrates are first-line to rapidly lower BP
C. Sublingual nitrates are safe in hypotension
D. Nitrates are contraindicated in all inferior MIs
Right ventricular infarction produces preload dependenceโ€”nitrates can precipitate severe hypotension and should be avoided.

5. Which P2Y12 inhibitor showed mortality benefit over clopidogrel in ACS patients undergoing invasive strategy?

A. Prasugrel
B. Ticagrelor
C. Ticlopidine
D. Cangrelor
Ticagrelor demonstrated reduced mortality vs clopidogrel in the PLATO trial in ACS patients.

6. After successful fibrinolysis for STEMI, the recommended timing for coronary angiography (pharmaco-invasive strategy) is:

A. Immediately within 30 minutes for all patients
B. Within 3โ€“24 hours if reperfusion appears successful
C. At 7 days routinely
D. Only if recurrent pain occurs
A routine early angiography (3โ€“24 h) after successful lysis optimizes outcomes by identifying residual lesions amenable to PCI.

7. A patient with NSTEMI should be risk-stratified using GRACE score primarily to determine:

A. Need for immediate fibrinolysis
B. Long-term arrhythmic risk for ICD
C. Timing of invasive coronary angiography
D. Eligibility for thrombolytic therapy
GRACE score predicts mortality and helps decide early (โ‰ค24 h) vs delayed invasive strategy in NSTEMI.

8. Which anticoagulant is preferred during PCI in a patient at high bleeding risk?

A. Unfractionated heparin
B. Low-molecular-weight heparin
C. Bivalirudin
D. Fondaparinux alone
Bivalirudin reduces procedural bleeding in some settings and is considered when bleeding risk is high.

9. Which ECG finding suggests posterior wall MI when anterior leads are non-diagnostic?

A. ST elevation in V1โ€“V2
B. Diffuse ST depressions with PR elevation
C. New LBBB only
D. ST depression in V1โ€“V3 with tall R waves (reciprocal)
Posterior MI often shows ST depression with tall R waves in V1โ€“V3โ€”reciprocal changes to posterior ST elevation.

10. In ACS, high-intensity statin therapy (atorvastatin 80 mg) should be started:

A. Only after 1 week if lipid panel abnormal
B. Immediately during index hospitalization
C. Not indicated in acute phase
D. Only if LDL > 130 mg/dL
High-intensity statin therapy begun early reduces recurrent ischemic events after ACS.

11. Which statement about primary PCI vs fibrinolysis is correct?

A. Primary PCI is superior when performed in a timely manner
B. Fibrinolysis has lower bleeding risk
C. Fibrinolysis is preferred for anterior MI if PCI available
D. Outcomes are identical irrespective of strategy
Primary PCI provides better patency and lower mortality than fibrinolysis when performed rapidly.

12. A patient has chest pain and an ECG showing diffuse PR depression with ST elevation in most leadsโ€”this is most consistent with:

A. Anterior STEMI
B. NSTEMI
C. Acute pericarditis
D. Posterior STEMI
Diffuse ST elevation with PR depression is classical for pericarditis, not localized STEMI changes.

13. Which of the following increases mortality if given routinely in uncomplicated STEMI?

A. Early aspirin
B. High-intensity statin
C. Reperfusion
D. Routine morphine for all
Routine morphine is not recommended for allโ€”use for refractory severe pain; it may delay P2Y12 absorption and has mixed outcome data.

14. The best initial test to assess left ventricular function at bedside after MI is:

A. Cardiac MRI
B. Nuclear ventriculography
C. Transthoracic echocardiography
D. CT coronary angiography
Echocardiography is the initial, bedside tool for EF assessment and detection of mechanical complications.

15. Which drug combination should be used cautiously (higher bleeding) in a patient requiring triple therapy (AF + recent PCI)?

A. Aspirin + clopidogrel only
B. DOAC + DAPT without modification
C. Single antiplatelet + anticoagulant
D. Dual antiplatelet only
Concurrent DOAC with DAPT markedly increases bleeding; strategies favor minimizing duration of triple therapy and using single antiplatelet with DOAC when appropriate.

16. In a patient with cardiogenic shock complicating STEMI, which is recommended as initial mechanical support when available?

A. Intra-aortic balloon pump for all patients
B. ECMO in isolation without coronary reperfusion
C. Consider Impella or ECMO as bridge when refractory despite inotropes
D. Thrombolysis only
Mechanical circulatory support (Impella/VA-ECMO) may be considered for refractory shock as bridge to revascularization or recovery; IABP is no longer routine.

17. In the setting of NSTEMI, which is the least appropriate?

A. Antiplatelet therapy
B. Anticoagulation during hospitalization
C. Risk stratification with troponin/ECG
D. Routine fibrinolysis
Fibrinolysis is not indicated in NSTEMI; management is guided by risk stratification and timing of invasive strategy.

18. Which lesion is an indication for urgent CABG rather than PCI in ACS?

A. Single-vessel proximal LAD severe stenosis
B. Left main coronary artery significant stenosis with multivessel disease
C. Isolated RCA occlusion
D. Small branch occlusion
Left main disease with multivessel involvement generally favors CABG for survival benefit, depending on SYNTAX score and surgical risk.

19. A patient with chest pain has a normal ECG but rising troponinโ€”this is classified as:

A. Unstable angina
B. NSTEMI
C. STEMI
D. Non-cardiac chest pain
Elevated cardiac biomarkers with no ST elevation classify as NSTEMI (subendocardial myocardial infarction).

20. Which antiplatelet agent is contraindicated in patients with prior stroke/TIA?

A. Ticagrelor
B. Prasugrel
C. Clopidogrel
D. Aspirin
Prasugrel increases intracranial bleeding risk and is contraindicated in prior stroke/TIA.

21. Post-PCI, when is it reasonable to consider de-escalation from ticagrelor to clopidogrel in ACS?

A. After 1 week routinely
B. When platelet function testing is unavailable
C. In high bleeding risk with guided strategy (genotype/platelet testing)
D. Never de-escalate
Guided de-escalation (genotype or platelet function testing) may be used to switch to clopidogrel in high bleeding risk patients.

22. Which of the following is the most common mechanical complication 3โ€“5 days after transmural MI?

A. Free wall rupture
B. Ventricular aneurysm
C. Papillary muscle rupture causing acute MR
D. Dressler syndrome
Papillary muscle rupture causing acute severe MR often occurs within days after MI; free wall rupture commonly causes sudden death around the same period but pap muscle rupture is a well-known early mechanical complication.

23. In a STEMI patient receiving tenecteplase, which anticoagulant is preferred during and after thrombolysis?

A. UFH infusion only
B. Enoxaparin according to weight-based dosing
C. Aspirin alone
D. Warfarin
Enoxaparin has evidence of efficacy and is commonly used adjunctively with fibrinolysis unless contraindicated.

24. Which is true regarding high-sensitivity troponin (hs-cTn) testing in suspected ACS?

A. hs-cTn allows earlier rule-out/rule-in using 0/1- or 0/3-hour algorithms
B. hs-cTn is less sensitive than conventional troponin
C. hs-cTn should not be used within first 24 hours
D. hs-cTn gives immediate diagnostic result on single sample always
High-sensitivity assays permit accelerated diagnostic pathways (0/1h or 0/3h) to rule in/out MI when combined with clinical assessment.

25. Which strategy reduces early recurrent ischemic events after PCI for ACS:

A. Timely complete revascularization for multivessel disease during index hospitalization
B. Conservative single-vessel intervention only
C. Routine staged CABG for all
D. No intervention for non-culprit lesions
Evidence supports staged or in-hospital complete revascularization in selected patients with multivessel disease to reduce events.

26. A 55-year-old with anterior STEMI is in cardiogenic shock; coronary anatomy shows left main occlusion. Best immediate step is:

A. Conservative medical therapy
B. Emergent revascularization (PCI/CABG depending on anatomy and team)
C. Elective CABG after 2 weeks
D. Fibrinolysis only
Left main occlusion in shock mandates urgent revascularization; choice between PCI and CABG depends on anatomy and surgical risk.

27. For acute ST-elevation MI, tenecteplase is preferred over alteplase because:

A. It is given as infusion over 60 minutes
B. It has lower efficacy
C. It is single bolus and easier to administer with similar efficacy
D. It requires intra-arterial delivery
Tenecteplase is bolus-administered (weight-based), facilitating rapid administration in pre-hospital or non-PCI settings.

28. A patient with recurrent ventricular tachycardia 2 days after MI should be managed with:

A. Immediate ICD implantation
B. Observation only
C. Acute stabilization (antiarrhythmics/defibrillation) and evaluation; ICD considered after 40 days if EF remains low
D. Elective pacemaker
Early VT after MI requires acute management; primary prevention ICD is normally deferred (~40 days) to allow recovery of EF.

29. Which of the following biomarkers is most specific for myocardial necrosis?

A. CK-MB
B. Cardiac troponin I/T
C. Myoglobin
D. LDH
Cardiac troponins are the most specific and sensitive biomarkers for myocardial injury.

30. Which feature on ECG makes early reperfusion mandatory rather than conservative therapy?

A. Persistent ST-segment elevation in contiguous leads
B. Widespread T-wave inversion only
C. Non-specific ST changes
D. Normal ECG with elevated troponin
Persistent ST elevation indicates transmural ischemia and is an indication for immediate reperfusion (STEMI).

31. Which of the following is the best management for no-reflow during PCI?

A. Immediate cessation of antiplatelets
B. Intracoronary vasodilators (adenosine, verapamil) and optimizing flow
C. Urgent CABG
D. Thrombolysis
No-reflow is treated with intracoronary vasodilators, thrombectomy (if indicated), and supportive measures.

32. Which finding suggests successful reperfusion after fibrinolysis?

A. Resolution of chest pain only
B. Decrease in blood pressure
C. >50% resolution of ST elevation at 60โ€“90 minutes and relief of pain
D. New onset arrhythmia
ST-segment resolution (>50%) within 60โ€“90 minutes is a clinical indicator of reperfusion success after lysis.

33. In ACS with cardiogenic shock, which vasopressor is preferred as first-line to maintain perfusion?

A. Dopamine
B. Norepinephrine
C. Phenylephrine
D. Isoproterenol
Norepinephrine is recommended as first-line vasopressor in cardiogenic shock to maintain perfusion with fewer arrhythmias than dopamine.

34. The recommended duration of DAPT after ACS treated with drug-eluting stent is usually:

A. 1 month
B. 3 months
C. 6 months
D. 12 months (minimum standard in ACS)
Guidelines recommend at least 12 months of DAPT after ACS unless bleeding risk mandates shorter duration.

35. Which of the following is a predictor of poor outcome after MI?

A. Younger age
B. Low systolic BP and elevated Killip class
C. Small infarct size
D. Normal renal function
Hypotension and higher Killip class indicate hemodynamic compromise and predict worse prognosis.

36. Which of the following is most appropriate for antithrombotic therapy in a patient with NSTEMI scheduled for early PCI?

A. Fondaparinux alone during PCI
B. No anticoagulation if on aspirin
C. UFH during PCI; fondaparinux requires UFH at time of PCI
D. Warfarin continuation
Fondaparinux needs UFH bolus during PCI to avoid catheter thrombosis; UFH is commonly used during the procedure.

37. Which feature is most suggestive of reinfarction while in hospital after an MI?

A. New chest pain with new ST changes and rising troponin
B. Persistent low-grade fever
C. Gradual improvement of symptoms
D. New mild ankle swelling
New ischemic symptoms with ECG changes and biomarker rise indicate reinfarction and prompt urgent evaluation.

38. Which of the following agents is recommended to reduce remodeling and mortality in patients with reduced EF after MI?

A. High-dose loop diuretics indefinitely
B. ACE inhibitor or ARNI when appropriate
C. Long-term nitrates
D. Routine magnesium supplementation
ACE inhibitors (or ARNI/ARB when indicated) reduce remodeling and improve survival in patients with LV dysfunction post-MI.

39. Which therapy is indicated for ST-elevation MI and is associated with chewed-loading immediately?

A. Clopidogrel only
B. Ticagrelor maintenance only
C. Aspirin 150โ€“325 mg chewed immediately
D. No antiplatelet until after PCI
Early aspirin loading (chewed) reduces early thrombotic complications and should be given immediately in suspected ACS.

40. In a patient with suspected ACS and recent use of sildenafil, nitrates should be avoided for at least:

A. 6 hours
B. 24 hours
C. 48 hours
D. No restriction
Sildenafil potentiates nitratesโ€”contraindicated within 24 hours of PDE-5 inhibitor use due to severe hypotension risk.

41. Coronary artery embolism causing MI should prompt evaluation for which condition?

A. Hypercholesterolemia only
B. Atrial fibrillation or mural thrombus
C. Peripheral arterial disease exclusively
D. Vasculitis only
Cardioembolic MI warrants search for atrial fibrillation, left ventricular thrombus, or other embolic sources.

42. Which metric best identifies high bleeding risk when considering DAPT duration?

A. SYNTAX score
B. TIMI risk score
C. HAS-BLED or PRECISE-DAPT score
D. GRACE score
HAS-BLED and PRECISE-DAPT scores help quantify bleeding risk to individualize DAPT duration.

43. Which procedure is indicated for mechanical complication of MI such as papillary muscle rupture with severe MR?

A. Immediate thrombolysis
B. Intensive medical therapy only
C. Elective PCI
D. Emergent surgical intervention (valve repair/replacement)
Mechanical complications such as pap muscle rupture require urgent surgical correction.

44. Early invasive strategy in NSTEMI is most strongly indicated by which of the following?

A. Ongoing chest pain and dynamic ST changes
B. Stable symptoms and normal troponin
C. Remote MI > 1 year ago
D. Low GRACE score
Active ischemia (ongoing pain, dynamic ECG changes) indicates immediate/early invasive management.

45. Which of these is true regarding use of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors in contemporary PCI for ACS?

A. Routinely recommended for all PCI
B. Reserved for bailout situations or high thrombus burden
C. Contraindicated with heparin
D. Replaces DAPT
GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors are now mainly used selectively for high thrombus burden or bailout; not routine for all PCI.

46. Which of the following is the recommended initial beta-blocker approach in uncomplicated STEMI?

A. High-dose IV bolus beta-blocker for all
B. Oral beta-blocker early unless contraindicated (shock, HF)
C. Avoid beta-blockers for 6 weeks
D. Use only after 1 year
Early oral beta-blockade is recommended unless there are contraindications like hypotension, shock, bradycardia, or acute HF.

47. Which ECG change is most characteristic of early transmural ischemia?

A. ST-segment elevation localized to contiguous leads
B. Diffuse PR depression
C. Isolated T-wave inversion
D. QT prolongation only
Localised ST elevation reflects transmural ischemia from coronary occlusion.

48. Which medication should be started in all patients with LVEF โ‰ค 40% after MI to improve outcomes?

A. Long-term IV inotrope
B. ACE inhibitor or ARNI
C. Routine aldosterone antagonist for all
D. High-dose NSAIDs
ACE inhibitors (or ARNI where appropriate) reduce mortality and remodeling in systolic dysfunction post-MI.

49. Which complication is MOST likely to present with sudden hypotension and electromechanical dissociation post-MI?

A. Ventricular aneurysm
B. Papillary muscle rupture
C. Free wall rupture
D. Pericarditis
Free wall rupture causes hemopericardium and tamponade, leading to sudden collapse and often electromechanical dissociation.

50. In primary PCI for a large thrombus burden, which adjunctive therapy may be considered?

A. Routine post-dilatation only
B. Thrombectomy and selective GPIIb/IIIa inhibitor
C. Routine switching to warfarin
D. Withholding antiplatelets
Thrombectomy and bailout GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors can be used selectively for large thrombus burden, though routine thrombectomy is not universally recommended.

51. Which is true concerning reperfusion injury during MI?

A. It may worsen myocardial injury despite restoring flow
B. It is prevented completely by IV beta-blockers
C. It does not occur in humans
D. It is beneficial for myocardial recovery
Reperfusion can paradoxically cause additional myocyte injury mediated by oxidative stress, calcium overload, and inflammation.

52. For which subgroup is prasugrel specifically NOT recommended?

A. Patients undergoing primary PCI without prior stroke
B. Patients with prior stroke or TIA
C. Patients under 75 years with diabetes
D. Patients with stent thrombosis history
Prasugrel increases intracranial hemorrhage risk and is contraindicated in those with prior stroke/TIA.

53. Which imaging modality is most useful to detect left ventricular free-wall rupture if suspected?

A. CT coronary angiography
B. Coronary angiography
C. Transthoracic echocardiography (urgent bedside)
D. Exercise ECG
Bedside echocardiography rapidly detects pericardial effusion/tamponade from free-wall rupture and guides emergent management.

54. Which factor is most determinant in choosing between PCI and CABG for multivessel disease after ACS?

A. Patient height
B. Coronary anatomy complexity (SYNTAX score)
C. Troponin level alone
D. Time of day
SYNTAX score and comorbidities guide revascularization strategy; high SYNTAX favors CABG for complex disease.

55. A patient with ACS on dual antiplatelet therapy requires urgent non-cardiac surgery. Best immediate step is:

A. Stop DAPT and proceed
B. Continue both agents regardless of bleeding risk
C. Multidisciplinary discussion to weigh ischemic vs bleeding risk; postpone if possible
D. Replace antiplatelet with warfarin
Urgent surgery requires individualized decisions balancing bleeding and ischemic risk; multidisciplinary planning and delaying surgery where feasible is preferred.

56. Which of the following best describes the Killip classification’s clinical use after MI?

A. Stratifies heart failure severity and prognosis
B. Determines eligibility for thrombolysis
C. Predicts arrhythmia occurrence only
D. Replaces GRACE score
Killip class (Iโ€“IV) assesses heart failure signs post-MI and correlates with prognosis, complementing risk scores.

57. Which antihyperglycemic class has demonstrated benefit in heart failure and may be considered post-ACS in patients with diabetes?

A. Sulfonylureas
B. SGLT2 inhibitors
C. Thiazolidinediones
D. Insulin as first-line for all
SGLT2 inhibitors reduce HF hospitalizations and are considered in diabetic patients with or at risk of heart failure post-ACS when appropriate.

58. Which laboratory abnormality increases bleeding risk and impacts antithrombotic choices post-ACS?

A. Hypernatremia
B. Elevated LDL
C. Severe renal dysfunction (low eGFR)
D. Mild transaminitis
Severe renal impairment increases bleeding risk and affects dosing and selection of anticoagulants and some antiplatelet agents.

59. Which is the most appropriate discharge follow-up for medication and LV function assessment after MI?

A. Discharge without follow-up
B. Early follow-up at 1โ€“2 weeks and repeat echocardiography at ~6โ€“12 weeks
C. Repeat coronary angiography at 1 week for all
D. Start no long-term medications
Early clinical review (1โ€“2 weeks) and reassessment of LV function after remodeling (6โ€“12 weeks) guide ongoing therapy and device decisions.

60. Which is the single most effective immediate intervention to reduce mortality in acute STEMI?

A. Intravenous beta-blocker
B. High-dose statin alone
C. Rapid reperfusion (primary PCI or timely fibrinolysis)
D. ACE inhibitor started immediately
Rapid reperfusion is the primary life-saving intervention in STEMI by restoring coronary perfusion and limiting infarct size.

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