| Literature DB >> 1642176 |
H R Arntz1, R Stern, T Linderer, R Schröder.
Abstract
The efficiency of an emergency medical system for routinely performed prehospital thrombolysis is evaluated for 1 of the 7 physician-staffed mobile intensive care units (MICU) in former West Berlin. During 19 consecutive months the MICU had 4,920 missions, and 1,226 patients had chest pain of presumed cardiac origin. The diagnosis at hospital discharge was acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in 406 patients and "interrupted" infarction in 11 patients (total 417). Correct on-scene electrocardiographic diagnosis of acute injury was made in 268 patients (64%) and was false-positive in 4 patients (1%). In 8%, present ST elevations were not recognized. In 27%, the electrocardiogram on scene was nondiagnostic (16% with no ST elevation, 11% with bundle branch block). Of all 417 patients with later hospital evidence of AMI, 317 (76%) were seen by the MICU physician within 4 hours, and 173 (41%) within the first hour from symptom onset. Two hundred three patients seen within 4 hours had diagnostic ST elevation on the scene, of whom 124 (61%) received prehospital thrombolysis (74 patients [36%] within the first hour). There was no prehospital death; hospital mortality was 6.3%. Because greater than 50% of all patients in the community, hospitalized because of AMI, made use of the MICU and 3/4 of them had called within 4 hours from symptom onset, a large proportion of all patients with AMI were candidates for the actually received prehospital thrombolysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1642176 DOI: 10.1016/0002-9149(92)91182-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cardiol ISSN: 0002-9149 Impact factor: 2.778