Guide — Cardiac
Chest Pain Assessment for Nurses
Chest pain is one of the most common and potentially life-threatening complaints nurses encounter. Systematic assessment — differentiating cardiac from non-cardiac causes and identifying red flags — determines urgency and guides immediate action.
10 min read · Cardiac
Educational use only. Any chest pain complaint requires immediate clinical assessment and provider notification per institutional protocol. This guide 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.
OPQRST Pain Assessment Framework
OPQRST provides a systematic structure for characterizing chest pain. Each component yields diagnostic information about etiology and severity.
- “When did the pain start?”
- “What were you doing when it began?”
- “Did it start suddenly or gradually?”
- “What makes the pain better?”
- “What makes it worse?”
- “Exertion, rest, breathing, position, food?”
- “Describe the pain in your own words.”
- “Is it pressure, squeezing, sharp, burning, tearing, aching?”
- “Does the pain move anywhere else?”
- “Arm, jaw, neck, back, shoulder, abdomen?”
- “On a scale of 0–10, how bad is the pain?”
- “How does it compare to prior episodes?”
- “How long have you had this pain?”
- “Is it constant or does it come and go?”
- “Has it changed since it started?”
Red Flag Findings — Escalate Immediately
Any of these findings require immediate provider notification and emergency action
- !ST elevation or new LBBB on 12-lead ECG
- !Hemodynamic instability: hypotension (SBP <90), tachycardia, diaphoresis, altered mental status
- !Tearing or ripping chest pain radiating to the back — aortic dissection until proven otherwise
- !Sudden severe dyspnea, unilateral leg swelling, pleuritic pain — pulmonary embolism
- !Pulsus paradoxus, muffled heart sounds, JVD — cardiac tamponade
- !Unequal blood pressure between arms — aortic dissection
- !New murmur in the setting of chest pain — papillary muscle rupture, aortic dissection
- !Chest pain with syncope or near-syncope
- !SpO₂ <90% or rapidly declining
Cardiac vs Non-Cardiac Chest Pain
| Feature | Cardiac (Ischemic) | Non-Cardiac |
|---|---|---|
| Quality | Pressure, squeezing, heaviness, tightness | Sharp, stabbing, burning, pleuritic |
| Location | Substernal, diffuse | Localized, reproducible with palpation (MSK), epigastric (GERD) |
| Radiation | Left arm, jaw, neck, back | No radiation, or localized area |
| Provocation | Exertion, emotional stress, cold; rest pain in ACS | Deep breathing (PE, pleuritis), position (pericarditis), swallowing (esophageal), palpation (MSK) |
| Relief | Rest (stable angina); NTG partial in ACS | Antacids (GERD); leaning forward (pericarditis); NSAIDs (MSK, pericarditis) |
| Associated sx | Diaphoresis, dyspnea, nausea, syncope | Cough, fever (pleuritis); heartburn (GERD); anxiety/hyperventilation (panic) |
| Duration | >20 min persistent = ACS | Often varies with breathing, position, or activity |
Associated Symptoms and Clinical Significance
| Symptom | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|
| Diaphoresis (sweating) | Highly suggestive of cardiac ischemia — sympathetic nervous system activation from myocardial ischemia |
| Dyspnea | ACS, pulmonary edema, PE, tension pneumothorax; can be primary ACS symptom especially in women and elderly |
| Nausea / vomiting | Common in inferior MI (vagal activation from RCA distribution); also aortic dissection and shock |
| Syncope | Hemodynamic compromise, lethal arrhythmia, aortic dissection, cardiac tamponade — always serious |
| Palpitations | Arrhythmia — may precede or accompany ACS; atrial fibrillation common post-MI |
| Fever / chills | Suggests infectious etiology: pneumonia, pericarditis, myocarditis, pleuritis |
| Cough / hemoptysis | PE (hemoptysis), pulmonary edema from CHF (pink frothy sputum), pneumonia |
| Unilateral leg swelling | Deep vein thrombosis → consider pulmonary embolism as etiology of chest pain |
Emergency Response Priorities
Documentation Considerations
Document in real time and include:
- ›Exact time of patient report and time of nurse assessment
- ›Full OPQRST characterization of pain including severity scale
- ›Associated symptoms present or absent (ROS: dyspnea, nausea, diaphoresis, syncope, palpitations)
- ›Vital signs including bilateral BP if aortic dissection suspected
- ›Time 12-lead ECG obtained and who was notified
- ›Provider notification time, name, and orders received
- ›Medications administered, dose, route, and patient response
- ›Pain reassessment rating after interventions
- ›Any change in condition, hemodynamic status, or rhythm
NCLEX Pearls
- ›First action for any new chest pain: 12-lead ECG within 10 minutes — before waiting for labs.
- ›Diaphoresis with chest pain is a highly significant cardiac red flag — always escalate.
- ›OPQRST systematically characterizes pain — character, radiation, and associated symptoms are most diagnostically useful.
- ›Tearing/ripping pain radiating to the back = aortic dissection until ruled out — check bilateral BPs.
- ›Leaning forward relieves pericarditis pain — a classic NCLEX distinguishing feature.
- ›Women, elderly, and diabetics often present atypically — fatigue, dyspnea, jaw pain without classic chest pressure.
- ›Nitroglycerin is contraindicated if: BP <90/60, inferior MI with RV involvement suspected, or PDE-5 inhibitor use within 24–48 hours.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026This page is written to align with American Heart Association (AHA) · American College of Cardiology (ACC) · AHA ACLS 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 →
