A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS

Introduction: Emergency department clinicians have a difficult task identifying which patients to admit and which patients to discharge home. Of the patients presenting to the emergency department for chest pain, 55 to 85 percent do not have a cardiac cause for their symptoms. Of those admitted for...

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Main Authors: Adel H Elbaih, Mena S Atyia, Ahmed E Abou-Zeid, Gamela M Nasr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bulgarian Association of Young Surgeons 2018-04-01
Series:International Journal of Surgery and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=275728
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spelling doaj-b9508737b4904f01a1246a962d827cbb2021-04-03T16:27:17ZengBulgarian Association of Young SurgeonsInternational Journal of Surgery and Medicine2367-699X2367-699X2018-04-0142617010.5455/ijsm.chest-pain-risk-stratification-toolA COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTSAdel H ElbaihMena S AtyiaAhmed E Abou-ZeidGamela M NasrIntroduction: Emergency department clinicians have a difficult task identifying which patients to admit and which patients to discharge home. Of the patients presenting to the emergency department for chest pain, 55 to 85 percent do not have a cardiac cause for their symptoms. Of those admitted for chest pain, more than 60 percent do not have acute coronary syndromes. Unnecessary admissions for chest pain in the U.S. alone cost billions of dollars annually. And the problem of (no monitored bed available) with increasing the length of stay at emergency department. Aim: of the study was improving the management process in patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome and predicts their outcome at the emergency department. Methods: The study was carried out among 60 patients presenting with non-traumatic chest pain for which no definitive non-ischemic cause was found. Potentially eligible patients were identified in the ED triage area and assessed for study with follow-up throughout their hospital stays for Major Adverse Cardiac Events (MACE). Results: TIMI risk score has the highest predictive performance of all risk stratification tools, as AUG is greatest (0.93); also, it has the highest sensitivity for MACE (96.5%) Goldman risk score has the highest specificity for MACE (60%). The difference between the tools in predictive ability for MACE was highly significant (p =0.0001). Conclusion: The results of this study confirm on the value of an integrated approach that involve combined analysis of the clinical history, ECG, troponin levels and early exercise testing in emergency room patients with chest pain.http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=275728Acute coronary syndromechest painrisk stratifications
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adel H Elbaih
Mena S Atyia
Ahmed E Abou-Zeid
Gamela M Nasr
spellingShingle Adel H Elbaih
Mena S Atyia
Ahmed E Abou-Zeid
Gamela M Nasr
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS
International Journal of Surgery and Medicine
Acute coronary syndrome
chest pain
risk stratifications
author_facet Adel H Elbaih
Mena S Atyia
Ahmed E Abou-Zeid
Gamela M Nasr
author_sort Adel H Elbaih
title A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS
title_short A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS
title_full A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS
title_fullStr A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS
title_full_unstemmed A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RISK STRATIFICATION TOOLS FOR CHEST PAIN IN EGYPTIANS EMERGENCY PATIENTS
title_sort comparative study of risk stratification tools for chest pain in egyptians emergency patients
publisher Bulgarian Association of Young Surgeons
series International Journal of Surgery and Medicine
issn 2367-699X
2367-699X
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Introduction: Emergency department clinicians have a difficult task identifying which patients to admit and which patients to discharge home. Of the patients presenting to the emergency department for chest pain, 55 to 85 percent do not have a cardiac cause for their symptoms. Of those admitted for chest pain, more than 60 percent do not have acute coronary syndromes. Unnecessary admissions for chest pain in the U.S. alone cost billions of dollars annually. And the problem of (no monitored bed available) with increasing the length of stay at emergency department. Aim: of the study was improving the management process in patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome and predicts their outcome at the emergency department. Methods: The study was carried out among 60 patients presenting with non-traumatic chest pain for which no definitive non-ischemic cause was found. Potentially eligible patients were identified in the ED triage area and assessed for study with follow-up throughout their hospital stays for Major Adverse Cardiac Events (MACE). Results: TIMI risk score has the highest predictive performance of all risk stratification tools, as AUG is greatest (0.93); also, it has the highest sensitivity for MACE (96.5%) Goldman risk score has the highest specificity for MACE (60%). The difference between the tools in predictive ability for MACE was highly significant (p =0.0001). Conclusion: The results of this study confirm on the value of an integrated approach that involve combined analysis of the clinical history, ECG, troponin levels and early exercise testing in emergency room patients with chest pain.
topic Acute coronary syndrome
chest pain
risk stratifications
url http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=275728
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