Francisco J Mellado-Vergel, Javier García del Águila, M.M. Ruiz-Montero, Fernando Rosell-Ortiz, Manuela Martínez-Lara, Itziar Vivar Díaz, Patricia Fernández-Valle, Ismael González-Lobato, Ángel García-Alcántara, Francisco Romero-Morales, [Rosell-Ortiz,F, Fernández-Valle,P, González-Lobato, I, Martínez-Lara,M, Ruiz-Montero,MM, Romero-Morales,F, Vivar Díaz,I, García del Águila,J] 1Empresa Pública de Emergencias Sanitarias de Andalucía. Andalusian Health Ministry, Andalucía, Spain. [Mellado-Vergel,FJ] Department of Urgencias, Hospital el Toyo, Almería, Spain. [García-Alcántara,A] Intensive Care Unit, Hospital Clínico, Málaga, Spain, and Project funded by (1) Public Health Emergency Service Enterprise of Andalusia, Spain (Andalusian Public Health System, public funding). (2) A research grant from ‘Fundación Progreso y Salud’ (Andalusian Research Agency, Spain, public funding). (3) Collaboration of a limited research grant from Boehringer Ingelheim Spain.
JOURNAL ARTICLE; OBJECTIVE Hospital mortality in myocardial infarction ST-elevation myocardial infarction has decreased in recent years, in contrast to prehospital mortality. Our objective was to determine initial complications and factors related to prehospital mortality in patients with acute myocardial infarction with ST segment elevation (STEMI). METHODS Observational study based on a prospective continuous register of patients of any age attended by out-of-hospital emergency teams in Andalusia between January 2006 and June 2009. This includes patients with acute coronary syndrome-like symptoms whose initial ECG showed ST elevation or presumably new left bundle branch block (LBBB). Epidemiological, prehospital data and final diagnostic were recorded. The study included all patients with STEMI on the register, without age restrictions. Forward stepwise logistic regression analysis was performed to control for confounders. RESULTS A total of 2528 patients were included, 24% were women. Mean age 63.4±13.4 years; 16.7% presented atypical clinical symptoms. Initial complications: ventricular fibrillation (VF) 8.4%, severe bradycardia 5.8%, third-degree atrial-ventricular (AV) block 2.4% and hypotension 13.5%. Fifty-two (2.1%) patients died before reaching hospital. Factors associated with prehospital mortality were female sex (OR 2.36, CI 1.28 to 4.33), atypical clinical picture (OR 2.31, CI 1.21 to 4.41), hypotension (OR 4.95, CI 2.60 to 9.20), LBBB (OR 4.29, CI 1.71 to 10.74), extensive infarction (ST elevation in ≥5 leads) (OR 2.53, CI 1.28 to 5.01) and VF (OR 2.82, CI 1.38 to 5.78). CONCLUSIONS A significant proportion of patients with STEMI present early complications in the prehospital setting, and some die before reaching hospital. Prehospital mortality was associated with female sex and atypical presentation, as pre-existing conditions, and hypotension, extensive infarction, LBBB and VF on emergency team attendance. Yes