Literature DB >> 856546

Evaluation of electrocardiogram in emergency room as a decision-making tool.

S Behar, S Schor, I Kariv, V Barell, B Modan.   

Abstract

The contribution of the electrocardiogram to the clinical judgment used by the physician in the emergency room to determine the necessity for hospitalizing patients was evaluated. Thirty-five percent of all 1,578 patients with presumed myocardial infarction referred to the Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel, for a one-year period had subsequently diagnosed myocardial infarctions. The ECG in the emergency room detected only 65 percent of these. The physician's clinical judgment was impressive in his decision to admit to the hospital almost all of the remaining 35 percent, while not admitting very many of the patients who did not have subsequently diagnosed myocardial infarctions. When the myocardial infarction was not evident on the ECG and the abnormalities on the tracings were identical for patients with subsequent myocardial infarctions and those without, again the physician made the right choice more often than the wrong. The follow-up ECG also attested to the good judgment of the physician in the emergency room. Of the emergency room ECGs of patients without subsequent myocardial infarctions who were admitted to the hospital, 17 percent showed myocardial infarction by follow-up, while this happened to only 2 percent of those denied admission.

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Year:  1977        PMID: 856546     DOI: 10.1378/chest.71.4.486

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chest        ISSN: 0012-3692            Impact factor:   9.410


  7 in total

1.  Missed myocardial ischaemia in the accident & emergency department: E.C.G. a need for audit?

Authors:  W A McCallion; P A Templeton; L A McKinney; J D Higginson
Journal:  Arch Emerg Med       Date:  1991-06

Review 2.  Detecting acute cardiac ischemia in the emergency department: a review of the literature.

Authors:  B D McCarthy; J B Wong; H P Selker
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1990 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 5.128

3.  Protocols in the emergency room evaluation of chest pain: do they fail to diagnose lateral wall myocardial infarction.

Authors:  K D Wrenn
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1987 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  Potential value of thallium-201 scintigraphy as a means of selecting patients for the coronary care unit.

Authors:  F J Wackers; K I Lie; K L Liem; E B Sokole; G Samson; J van der Schoot; D Durrer
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1979-01

5.  Prognosis in patients with spontaneous chest pain, a nondiagnostic electrocardiogram, normal cardiac enzymes, and no evidence of severe resting ischemia by quantitative technetium 99m sestamibi tomographic imaging.

Authors:  T D Miller; T F Christian; M R Hopfenspirger; D O Hodge; M F Hauser; R J Gibbons
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  1998 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 5.952

6.  Early diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction by a newly developed rapid immunoturbidimetric assay for myoglobin.

Authors:  J Mair; E Artner-Dworzak; P Lechleitner; B Morass; J Smidt; I Wagner; F Dienstl; B Puschendorf
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1992-11

7.  Evaluation of clinical utility of serum enzymes and troponin-T in the early stages of acute myocardial infarction.

Authors:  Hitesh Shah; N Haridas
Journal:  Indian J Clin Biochem       Date:  2003-07
  7 in total

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