Emergency Medicine International (Jan 2012)

The Challenge of Triaging Chest Pain Patients: The Bernese University Hospital Experience

  • Martin Rohacek,
  • Amina Bertolotti,
  • Nadine Grützmüller,
  • Urs Simmen,
  • Hans Marty,
  • Heinz Zimmermann,
  • Aristomenis Exadaktylos,
  • Arampatzis Spyridon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/975614
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2012

Abstract

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Accurate diagnosis of the causes of chest pain and dyspnea remain challenging. In this preliminary observational study with a 5-year follow-up, we attempted to find a simplified approach to selecting patients with chest pain needing immediate care based on the initial evaluation in ED. During a 24-month period were randomly selected 301 patients and a conditional inference tree (CIT) was used as the basis of the prognostic rule. Common diagnoses were musculoskeletal chest pain (27%), ACS (19%) and panic attack (12%). Using variables of ACS symptoms we estimated the likelihood of ACS based on a CIT to be high at 91% (32), low at 4% (198) and intermediate at 20.5–40% in (71) patients. Coronary catheterization was performed within 24 hours in 91% of the patients with ACS. A culprit lesion was found in 79%. Follow-up (median 4.2 years) information was available for 70% of the patients. Of the 164 patients without ACS who were followed up, 5 were treated with revascularization for stable angina pectoris, 2 were treated with revascularization for myocardial infarction, and 25 died. Although a simple triage decision tree could theoretically help to efficient select patients needing immediate care we need also to be vigilant for those presenting with atypical symptoms.