Abstract
The authors performed a 6-month review of heart failure patients presenting to a teaching hospital emergency department to determine the rate of positive serum myocardial infarction markers. All patients with an emergency department discharge diagnosis of heart failure were included; those with a creatinine level >2.0 mg/dL were excluded. There were 151 patients who met the entry criteria, with a mean age of 68.6 +/- 13.6 years, and 84 (56%) were men. The mean ejection fraction was 32%, and the mean Framingham score was 3.8 +/- 1.6. Twenty (14%) had positive markers. Troponin T was positive in 17 (11%), and creatine kinase was positive in nine (6%). Both markers were positive in six (4%). Chest pain was absent in 70% of the positive marker group. The authors conclude that elevated cardiac markers are not rare in decompensated heart failure. These pilot data suggest these tests should be routinely obtained on heart failure patients.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Peacock, W. F., Emerman, C. E., Doleh, M., Civic, K., & Butt, S. (2003). Retrospective review: the incidence of non-ST segment elevation MI in emergency department patients presenting with decompensated heart failure. Congestive Heart Failure (Greenwich, Conn.), 9(6), 303–308. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1527-5299.2003.02036.x
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