| Literature DB >> 26900163 |
Òscar Miró1, Frank W Peacock2, John J McMurray3, Héctor Bueno4, Michael Christ5, Alan S Maisel6, Louise Cullen7, Martin R Cowie8, Salvatore Di Somma9, Francisco J Martín Sánchez10, Elke Platz11, Josep Masip12, Uwe Zeymer13, Christiaan Vrints14, Susanna Price15, Alexander Mebazaa16, Christian Mueller17.
Abstract
Heart failure is a global public health challenge frequently presenting to the emergency department. After initial stabilization and management, one of the most important decisions is to determine which patients can be safely discharged and which require hospitalization. This is a complex decision that depends on numerous subjective factors, including both the severity of the patient's underlying condition and an estimate of the acuity of the presentation. An emergency department observation period may help select the correct option. Ideally, during an observation period, risk stratification should be carried out using parameters specifically designed for use in the emergency department. Unfortunately, there is little objective literature to guide this disposition decision. An objective and reliable definition of low-risk characteristics to identify early discharge candidates is needed. Benchmarking outcomes in patients discharged from the emergency department without hospitalization could aid this process. Biomarker determinations, although undoubtedly useful in establishing diagnosis and predicting longer-term prognosis, require prospective validation for emergency department disposition guidance. The challenge of identifying emergency department acute heart failure discharge candidates will only be overcome by future multidisciplinary research defining the current knowledge gaps and identifying potential solutions.Entities:
Keywords: Acute heart failure; discharge; emergency department; prognosis; risk stratification
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26900163 PMCID: PMC4992666 DOI: 10.1177/2048872616633853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care ISSN: 2048-8726