Impact of age on clinical outcome and postlytic management strategies in patients treated with intravenous thrombolytic therapy: Results from the TIMI II study

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Abstract

Background: Few thrombolytic studies have assessed whether patient age is an indication for routine postlytic cardiac catheterization and revascularization or evaluated the impact of age on 1-year outcome differences after acute myocardial infarction. Methods and Results: A secondary analysis of 3339 patients enrolled in the TIMI II trial was performed to identify differences in clinical and coronary angiographic findings and 1-year cardiac event rates among 841 patients <50 years old, 1639 patients 50 to 64 years old, and 859 patients 65 to 75 years old. Differences in 1-year clinical outcome were assessed among patients randomly assigned to an invasive or a conservative postlytic strategy within each age group. The percentages of patients with a prior history of myocardial infarction, angina, congestive heart failure, hypertension, or diabetes mellitus or an infarction complicated at the time of study entry by shock, pulmonary edema, hypotension, rales more than one third of lung fields, or atrial fibrillation as well as the percentage of female patients (all P

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Aguirre, F. V., McMahon, R. P., Mueller, H., Kleiman, N. S., Kern, M. J., Desvigne-Nickens, P., … Chaitman, B. R. (1994). Impact of age on clinical outcome and postlytic management strategies in patients treated with intravenous thrombolytic therapy: Results from the TIMI II study. Circulation, 90(1), 78–86. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.90.1.78

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