Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine (Dec 2021)

Scoring systems for the triage and assessment of short-term cardiovascular risk in patients with acute chest pain

  • Nicklaus P. Ashburn,
  • James C. O’Neill,
  • Jason P. Stopyra,
  • Simon A. Mahler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31083/j.rcm2204144
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 4
pp. 1393 – 1403

Abstract

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Acute chest pain is a common emergency department (ED) chief complaint. Evaluating patients for acute coronary syndrome is challenging because missing the diagnosis carries substantial morbidity, mortality, and medicolegal consequences. However, over-testing is associated with increased cost, overcrowding, and possible iatrogenic harm. Over the past two decades, multiple risk scoring systems have been developed to help emergency providers evaluate patients with acute chest pain. The ideal risk score balances safety by achieving high sensitivity and negative predictive value for major adverse cardiovascular events while also being effective in identifying a large proportion of patients for early discharge from the ED. This review examines contemporary risk scores used to risk stratify patients with acute chest pain.

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