Literature DB >> 12454338

Comparison of in-hospital outcomes following early or delayed angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction.

V S Srinivas1, Babak A Vakili, David L Brown.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Studies of primary angioplasty for treatment of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have not appeared to demonstrate a reduction in efficacy as a function of time to treatment. We sought to compare the outcomes of patients treated in New York State with primary angioplasty within 6 hours of symptom onset to those treated between 6 and 23 hours after the onset of AMI.
METHODS: We used data from the 1995 Coronary Angioplasty Reporting System of the New York State Department of Health to compare the in-hospital outcomes of patients treated with early (within 6 hours) or delayed angioplasty (6 23 hours) for AMI.
RESULTS: Early angioplasty (within 6 hours after onset of chest pain) was attempted in 957 patients (71.3%), while 385 patients (28.7%) had a delayed procedure (6 23 hours after the onset of chest pain). Patients who underwent delayed angioplasty were older (mean age, 62.6 years versus 60.4 years in the early group; p < 0.01) and more often female (36% vs. 28% in the early treatment group; p < 0.001). Patients treated early more frequently demonstrated hemodynamic instability (13.6% versus 9.1% in the late treatment group; p = 0.02), malignant ventricular arrhythmia (8.5% versus 2.9% in the late treatment group; p < 0.001) and cardiogenic shock (6.6% versus 1.8% in the late treatment group; p < 0.001). Overall in-hospital mortality was 63/1,342 (4.7%) with no difference based on early or delayed angioplasty (5.2% versus 3.4%, respectively; p = NS). The composite of the major adverse cardiac events including in-hospital death, reinfarction and emergency bypass surgery did not differ significantly between the early and delayed groups (7.7% versus 5.5%, respectively; p = NS). In multivariable models, delayed angioplasty was not an independent predictor of either in-hospital mortality or major adverse cardiac events.
CONCLUSION: Delayed reperfusion does not influence in-hospital clinical outcomes following PTCA for acute myocardial infarction.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12454338

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Invasive Cardiol        ISSN: 1042-3931            Impact factor:   2.022


  1 in total

1.  Timing, setting and incidence of cardiovascular complications in patients with acute myocardial infarction submitted to primary percutaneous coronary intervention.

Authors:  Cristina Giglioli; Massimo Margheri; Serafina Valente; Marco Comeglio; Chiara Lazzeri; Tania Chechi; Corinna Armentano; Salvatore Mario Romano; Massimilano Falai; Gian Franco Gensini
Journal:  Can J Cardiol       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 5.223

  1 in total

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