mdlinx mdlinx
Latest (24) Full Text Articles (1218) Article Summary

Identification of very low risk chest pain using clinical data in the emergency department
International Journal of Cardiology, 07/22/2011

Sanchis J et al. – In patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain of uncertain origin and without prior ischemic heart disease, very low risk patients can be identified using clinical data. These patients could be quickly discharged without further non–invasive stress testing.

Methods
  • A total of 772 patients were studied.
  • Ischemia in the electrocardiogram, troponin elevation or history of ischemic heart disease, were exclusion criteria.
  • The primary end point was 30day cardiac events (death, myocardial infarction or revascularization).
  • The secondary end point was 1year major events (death or myocardial infarction).

Results
  • The primary and secondary end point rates were 123 (18%) and 31 (4%).
  • Predictive variables for the primary end point were typical chest pain (OR=1.8, p=0.007),≥2 pain episodes in last 24h (OR=3.4, p=0.0001), age ≥55years (OR=1.8, p=0.03), male (OR=2.2, p=0.001), diabetes (OR=1.8, p=0.01) and family history of ischemic heart disease (OR=2.0, p=0.02).
  • A very low risk category could be distinguished (<2 predictors, n=114) that showed only 3 (2.6%) events at 30days (all 3 revascularizations), compared with 120 (18%) in the remaining patients (p=0.0001).
  • The very low risk criteria had 97% negative predictive for 30day cardiac events.
  • No very low risk patient presented major events at 1year compared with 31 (4.7%) in the remaining patients (p=0.009).

► Click here to access PubMed, Publisher and related articles...
<< Previous Article | Next Article >>

    Currently, there are no available articles.

Your Unread Messages in Anesthesiology

See All >> Messages include industry-sponsored communications and special communications from MDLinx

Most Popular Anesthesiology Articles

Last month's top read Top Articles of 2012

Indexed Journals in Anesthesiology: Anaesthesia, Anesthesia & Analgesia, Current Anaesthesia and Critical Caremore

Other Topics in Anesthesiology

Register now to view all the MDLinx contents (FREE)!

  • Stay current on the latest literature, research and clinical news
  • Get special communications and offers from MDLinx and our sponsors
  • Receive invitations to paid market research
View Samples and Register

Stay current - Media Tool

Newsletter
RSS
Follow Us
Facebook

Receive free subspecialty
"5-minute updates" via email

Sign up!

Send the E-mail Newsletter to a Colleague


Send

Subscribe to our free RSS feeds:
Get the latest news in your specialty automatically added to your newsreader or your personal My Yahoo!, Google, My MSN or My AOL page. Learn More

Follow Us on Twitter
Twitter is a rich source of instantly updated information. Join today and follow @MDLinx to start receiving tweets. Learn More

Close