1,149 results on '"Diercks, Deborah B"'
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2. Guidelines for reasonable and appropriate care in the emergency department (GRACE): Recurrent, low‐risk chest pain in the emergency department
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Musey, Paul I, Bellolio, Fernanda, Upadhye, Suneel, Chang, Anna Marie, Diercks, Deborah B, Gottlieb, Michael, Hess, Erik P, Kontos, Michael C, Mumma, Bryn E, Probst, Marc A, Stahl, John H, Stopyra, Jason P, Kline, Jeffrey A, and Carpenter, Christopher R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Mental Health ,Cardiovascular ,Health Services ,Pain Research ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Emergency Care ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Adult ,Chest Pain ,Coronary Angiography ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Exercise Test ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Risk Assessment ,acute coronary syndrome ,chest pain ,low risk ,recurrent ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
This first Guideline for Reasonable and Appropriate Care in the Emergency Department (GRACE-1) from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine is on the topic: Recurrent, Low-risk Chest Pain in the Emergency Department. The multidisciplinary guideline panel used The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach to assess the certainty of evidence and strength of recommendations regarding eight priority questions for adult patients with recurrent, low-risk chest pain and have derived the following evidence based recommendations: (1) for those >3 h chest pain duration we suggest a single, high-sensitivity troponin below a validated threshold to reasonably exclude acute coronary syndrome (ACS) within 30 days; (2) for those with a normal stress test within the previous 12 months, we do not recommend repeat routine stress testing as a means to decrease rates of major adverse cardiac events at 30 days; (3) insufficient evidence to recommend hospitalization (either standard inpatient admission or observation stay) versus discharge as a strategy to mitigate major adverse cardiac events within 30 days; (4) for those with non-obstructive (
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- 2021
3. Monotherapy Anticoagulation to Expedite Home Treatment of Patients Diagnosed With Venous Thromboembolism in the Emergency Department: A Pragmatic Effectiveness Trial
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Kline, Jeffrey A, Adler, David H, Alanis, Naomi, Bledsoe, Joseph R, Courtney, Daniel M, d’Etienne, James P, Diercks, Deborah B, Garrett, John S, Jones, Alan E, Mackenzie, David C, Madsen, Troy, Matuskowitz, Andrew J, Mumma, Bryn E, Nordenholz, Kristen E, Pagenhardt, Justine, Runyon, Michael S, Stubblefield, William B, and Willoughby, Christopher B
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Patient Safety ,Hematology ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Anticoagulants ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Humans ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Rivaroxaban ,Venous Thromboembolism ,bleeding ,emergency medicine ,hemorrhage ,outcomes research ,thromboembolism ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundThe objective was to test if low-risk emergency department patients with vitamin K antagonist (venous thromboembolism [VTE]; including venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism [PE]) can be safely and effectively treated at home with direct acting oral (monotherapy) anticoagulation in a large-scale, real-world pragmatic effectiveness trial.MethodsThis was a single-arm trial, conducted from 2016 to 2019 in accordance with the Standards for Reporting Implementation Studies guideline in 33 emergency departments in the United States. Participants had newly diagnosed VTE with low risk of death based upon either the modified Hestia criteria, or physician judgment plus the simplified PE severity index score of zero, together with nonhigh bleeding risk were eligible. Patients had to be discharged within 24 hours of triage and treated with either apixaban or rivaroxaban. Effectiveness was defined by the primary efficacy and safety outcomes, image-proven recurrent VTE and bleeding requiring hospitalization >24 hours, respectively, with an upper limit of the 95% CI for the 30-day frequency of VTE recurrence below 2.0% for both outcomes.ResultsWe enrolled 1421 patients with complete outcomes data, including 903 with venous thrombosis and 518 with PE. The recurrent VTE requiring hospitalization occurred in 14/1421 (1.0% [95% CI, 0.5%-1.7%]), and bleeding requiring hospitalization occurred in 12/1421 (0.8% [0.4%-1.5%). The rate of severe bleeding using International Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis criteria was 2/1421 (0.1% [0%-0.5%]). No patient died, and serious adverse events occurred in 2.5% of venous thrombosis patients and 2.3% of patients with PE. Medication nonadherence was reported by patients in 8.0% (6.6%-9.5%) and was associated with a risk ratio of 6.0 (2.3-15.2) for VTE recurrence. Among all patients diagnosed with VTE in the emergency department during the period of study, 18% of venous thrombosis patients and 10% of patients with PE were enrolled.ConclusionsMonotherapy treatment of low-risk patients with venous thrombosis or PE in the emergency department setting produced a low rate of bleeding and VTE recurrence, but may be underused. Patients with venous thrombosis and PE should undergo risk-stratification before home treatment. Improved patient adherence may reduce rate of recurrent VTE. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03404635.
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- 2021
4. Impact of Social Determinants of Health, Health Literacy, Self-perceived Risk, and Trust in the Emergency Physician on Compliance with Follow-up
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Sutton, James, Gu, Leon, and Diercks, Deborah B.
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Emergency Medicine ,Follow-up ,Social Determinants ,Health Literacy ,Self-Perceived Risk ,Compliance - Abstract
Introduction: Patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with “low-risk” acute coronary syndrome (ACS) symptoms can be discharged with outpatient follow-up. However, follow-up compliance is low for unknown nonclinical reasons. We hypothesized that a patient’s social factors, health literacy, self-perceived risk, and trust in the emergency physician may impact follow-up compliance.Methods: This was a prospective study of a convenience sample of discharged ED patients presenting with chest pain and given a follow-up appointment prior to departing the ED. Patients were asked about social and demographic factors and to estimate their own risk for heart disease; they also completed the Short Assessment of Health Literacy-English (SAHL-E) and the Trust in Physician Scale (TiPS).Results: We enrolled146 patients with a follow-up rate of 36.3%. Patients who had a low self-perceived heart disease risk (10% or less) were significantly less likely to attend follow-up than those with a higher perceived risk (23% vs 44%, P = 0.01). Other factors did not significantly predict follow-up rates.Conclusion: In an urban county ED, in patients who were deemed low risk for ACS and discharged, only self-perception of risk was associated with compliance with a follow-up appointment.
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- 2021
5. Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Management of Adult Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Lo, Bruce M., Carpenter, Christopher R., Ducey, Stephen, Gottlieb, Michael, Kaji, Amy, Diercks, Deborah B., Wolf, Stephen J., Anderson, John D., Byyny, Richard, Friedman, Benjamin, Gemme, Seth R., Gerardo, Charles J., Godwin, Steven A., Hahn, Sigrid A., Hatten, Benjamin W., Haukoos, Jason S., Kwok, Heemun, Mace, Sharon E., Moran, Maggie, Promes, Susan B., Shah, Kaushal H., Shih, Richard D., Silvers, Scott M., Slivinski, Andrea, Smith, Michael D., Thiessen, Molly E.W., Tomaszewski, Christian A., Trent, Stacy, Valente, Jonathan H., Wall, Stephen P., Westafer, Lauren M., Yu, Yanling, Cantrill, Stephen V., Finnell, John T., Schulz, Travis, and Vandertulip, Kaeli
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- 2023
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6. Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Evaluation and Management of Emergency Department Patients With Suspected Appendicitis: Approved by ACEP Board of Directors February 1, 2023
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Diercks, Deborah B., Adkins, Eric J., Harrison, Nicholas, Sokolove, Peter E., Kwok, Heemun, Wolf, Stephen J., Anderson, John D., Byyny, Richard, Carpenter, Christopher R., Friedman, Benjamin, Gemme, Seth R., Gerardo, Charles J., Godwin, Steven A., Hahn, Sigrid A., Hatten, Benjamin W., Haukoos, Jason S., Kaji, Amy, Lo, Bruce M., Mace, Sharon E., Moran, Maggie, Promes, Susan B., Shah, Kaushal H., Shih, Richard D., Silvers, Scott M., Slivinski, Andrea, Smith, Michael D., Thiessen, Molly E.W., Tomaszewski, Christian A., Trent, Stacy, Valente, Jonathan H., Wall, Stephen P., Westafer, Lauren M., Yu, Yanling, Cantrill, Stephen V., Finnell, John T., Schulz, Travis, and Vandertulip, Kaeli
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- 2023
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7. Study protocol for a multicentre implementation trial of monotherapy anticoagulation to expedite home treatment of patients diagnosed with venous thromboembolism in the emergency department
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Kline, Jeffrey, Adler, David, Alanis, Naomi, Bledsoe, Joseph, Courtney, Daniel, D'Etienne, James, Diercks, Deborah B, Garrett, John, Jones, Alan E, MacKenzie, David, Madsen, Troy, Matuskowitz, Andrew, Mumma, Bryn, Nordenholz, Kristen, Pagenhardt, Justine, Runyon, Michael, Stubblefield, William, and Willoughby, Christopher
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Clinical Research ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Hematology ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Anticoagulants ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Humans ,Indiana ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Risk Factors ,Venous Thromboembolism ,accident & emergency medicine ,clinical pharmacology ,thromboembolism ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
IntroductionIn the USA, many emergency departments (EDs) have established protocols to treat patients with newly diagnosed deep vein thrombosis (DVT) as outpatients. Similar treatment of patients with pulmonary embolism (PE) has been proposed, but no large-scale study has been published to evaluate a comprehensive, integrated protocol that employs monotherapy anticoagulation to treat patients diagnosed with DVT and PE in the ED.Methods and analysisThis protocol describes the implementation of the Monotherapy Anticoagulation To expedite Home treatment of Venous ThromboEmbolism (MATH-VTE) study at 33 hospitals in the USA. The study was designed and executed to meet the requirements for the Standards for Reporting Implementation Studies guideline. The study was funded by investigator-initiated awards from industry, with Indiana University as the sponsor. The study principal investigator and study associates travelled to each site to provide on-site training. The protocol identically screens patients with both DVT or PE to determine low risk of death using either the modified Hestia criteria or physician judgement plus a negative result from the simplified PE severity index. Patients must be discharged from the ED within 24 hours of triage and treated with either apixaban or rivaroxaban. Overall effectiveness is based upon the primary efficacy and safety outcomes of recurrent VTE and bleeding requiring hospitalisation respectively. Target enrolment of 1300 patients was estimated with efficacy success defined as the upper limit of the 95% CI for the 30-day frequency of VTE recurrence below 2.0%. Thirty-three hospitals in 17 states were initiated in 2016-2017.Ethics and disseminationAll sites had Institutional Review Board approval. We anticipate completion of enrolment in June 2020; study data will be available after peer-reviewed publication. MATH-VTE will provide information from a large multicentre sample of US patients about the efficacy and safety of home treatment of VTE with monotherapy anticoagulation.
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- 2020
8. The Accuracy of Interqual Criteria in Determining the Observation versus Inpatient Status in Older Adults with Syncope
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Chang, Anna Marie, Hollander, Judd E, Su, Erica, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Inpatients ,Length of Stay ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Syncope ,case management ,geriatrics ,InterQual ,syncope ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundMcKesson's InterQual criteria are widely used in hospitals to determine if patients should be classified as observation or inpatient status, but the accuracy of the criteria is unknown.ObjectiveWe sought to determine whether InterQual criteria accurately predicted length of stay (LOS) in older patients with syncope.MethodsWe conducted a secondary analysis of a cohort study of adults ≥60 years of age who had syncope. We calculated InterQual criteria and classified the patient as observation or inpatient status. Outcomes were whether LOS were less than or greater than 2 midnights.ResultsWe analyzed 2361 patients; 1227 (52.0%) patients were male and 1945 (82.8%) were white, with a mean age of 73.2 ± 9.0 years. The median LOS was 32.6 h (interquartile range 24.2-71.8). The sensitivity of InterQual criteria for LOS was 60.8% (95% confidence interval 57.9-63.6%) and the specificity was 47.8% (95% confidence interval 45.0-50.5%).ConclusionsIn older adults with syncope, those who met InterQual criteria for inpatient status had longer LOS compared with those who did not; however, the accuracy of the criteria to predict length of stay over 2 days is poor, with a sensitivity of 60% and a specificity of 48%. Future research should identify criteria to improve LOS prediction.
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- 2020
9. Myocardial Infarction Can Be Safely Excluded by High‐sensitivity Troponin I Testing 3 Hours After Emergency Department Presentation
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Peacock, W Frank, Christenson, Robert, Diercks, Deborah B, Fromm, Christian, Headden, Gary F, Hogan, Christopher J, Kulstad, Erik B, LoVecchio, Frank, Nowak, Richard M, Schrock, Jon W, Singer, Adam J, Storrow, Alan B, Straseski, Joely, Wu, Alan HB, and Zelinski, Daniel P
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Prevention ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Adult ,Biomarkers ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Troponin I ,Troponin T ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe accuracy and speed by which acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is excluded are an important determinant of emergency department (ED) length of stay and resource utilization. While high-sensitivity troponin I (hsTnI) >99th percentile (upper reference level [URL]) represents a "rule-in" cutpoint, our purpose was to evaluate the ability of the Beckman Coulter hsTnI assay, using various level-of-quantification (LoQ) cutpoints, to rule out AMI within 3 hours of ED presentation in suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients.MethodsThis multicenter evaluation enrolled adults with >5 minutes of ACS symptoms and an electrocardiogram obtained per standard care. Exclusions were ST-segment elevation or chronic hemodialysis. After informed consent was obtained, blood samples were collected in heparin at ED admission (baseline), ≥1 to 3, ≥3 to 6, and ≥6 to 9 hours postadmission. Samples were processed and stored at -20°C within 1 hour and were tested at three independent clinical laboratories on an immunoassay system (DxI 800, Beckman Coulter). Analytic cutpoints were the URL of 17.9 ng/L and two LoQ cutpoints, defined as the 10 and 20% coefficient of variation (5.6 and 2.3 ng/L, respectively). A criterion standard MI diagnosis was adjudicated by an independent endpoint committee, blinded to hsTnI, and using the universal definition of MI.ResultsOf 1,049 patients meeting the entry criteria, and with baseline and 1- to 3-hour hsTnI results, 117 (11.2%) had an adjudicated final diagnosis of AMI. AMI patients were typically older, with more cardiovascular risk factors. Median (IQR) presentation time was 4 (1.6-16.0) hours after symptom onset, although AMI patients presented ~0.5 hour earlier than non-AMI. Enrollment and first blood draw occurred at a mean of ~1 hour after arrival. To evaluate the assay's rule-out performance, patients with any hsTnI > URL were considered high risk and were excluded. The remaining population (n = 829) was divided into four LoQ relative categories: both hsTnI LoQ (Lo-Hi cohort); first > LoQ and second LoQ (Hi-Hi cohort). In patients with any hsTnI result 3 hours after the onset of suspected ACS symptoms, with at least two Beckman Coulter Access hsTnI LoQ had inadequate sensitivity and NPV.
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- 2020
10. Risk Stratification of Older Adults Who Present to the Emergency Department With Syncope: The FAINT Score
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Probst, Marc A, Gibson, Thomas, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Aging ,Cardiovascular ,Neurosciences ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Emergency Care ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Area Under Curve ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Health Status Indicators ,Humans ,Male ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Syncope ,United States ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Study objectiveOlder adults with syncope are commonly treated in the emergency department (ED). We seek to derive a novel risk-stratification tool to predict 30-day serious cardiac outcomes.MethodsWe performed a prospective, observational study of older adults (≥60 years) with unexplained syncope or near syncope who presented to 11 EDs in the United States. Patients with a serious diagnosis identified in the ED were excluded. We collected clinical and laboratory data on all patients. Our primary outcome was 30-day all-cause mortality or serious cardiac outcome.ResultsWe enrolled 3,177 older adults with unexplained syncope or near syncope between April 2013 and September 2016. Mean age was 73 years (SD 9.0 years). The incidence of the primary outcome was 5.7% (95% confidence interval [CI] 4.9% to 6.5%). Using Bayesian logistic regression, we derived the FAINT score: history of heart failure, history of cardiac arrhythmia, initial abnormal ECG result, elevated pro B-type natriuretic peptide, and elevated high-sensitivity troponin T. A FAINT score of 0 versus greater than or equal to 1 had sensitivity of 96.7% (95% CI 92.9% to 98.8%) and specificity 22.2% (95% CI 20.7% to 23.8%), respectively. The FAINT score tended to be more accurate than unstructured physician judgment: area under the curve 0.704 (95% CI 0.669 to 0.739) versus 0.630 (95% CI 0.589 to 0.670).ConclusionAmong older adults with syncope or near syncope of potential cardiac cause, a FAINT score of zero had a reasonably high sensitivity for excluding death and serious cardiac outcomes at 30 days. If externally validated, this tool could improve resource use for this common condition.
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- 2020
11. Orthostatic vital signs do not predict 30 day serious outcomes in older emergency department patients with syncope: A multicenter observational study
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White, Jennifer L, Hollander, Judd E, Chang, Anna Marie, Nishijima, Daniel K, Lin, Amber L, Su, Erica, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Nicks, Bret A, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Emergency Care ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Case-Control Studies ,Electrocardiography ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Heart Diseases ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Physical Examination ,Prospective Studies ,Syncope ,Vital Signs ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundSyncope is a common chief complaint among older adults in the Emergency Department (ED), and orthostatic vital signs are often a part of their evaluation. We assessed whether abnormal orthostatic vital signs in the ED are associated with composite 30-day serious outcomes in older adults presenting with syncope.MethodsWe performed a secondary analysis of a prospective, observational study at 11 EDs in adults ≥ 60 years who presented with syncope or near syncope. We excluded patients lost to follow up. We used the standard definition of abnormal orthostatic vital signs or subjective symptoms of lightheadedness upon standing to define orthostasis. We determined the rate of composite 30-day serious outcomes, including those during the index ED visit, such as cardiac arrhythmias, myocardial infarction, cardiac intervention, new diagnosis of structural heart disease, stroke, pulmonary embolism, aortic dissection, subarachnoid hemorrhage, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, hemorrhage/anemia requiring transfusion, with major traumatic injury from fall, recurrent syncope, and death) between the groups with normal and abnormal orthostatic vital signs.ResultsThe study cohort included 1974 patients, of whom 51.2% were male and 725 patients (37.7%) had abnormal orthostatic vital signs. Comparing those with abnormal to those with normal orthostatic vital signs, we did not find a difference in composite 30-serious outcomes (111/725 (15.3%) vs 184/1249 (14.7%); unadjusted odds ratio, 1.05 [95%CI, 0.81-1.35], p = 0.73). After adjustment for gender, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure (CHF), history of arrhythmia, dyspnea, hypotension, any abnormal ECG, physician risk assessment, medication classes and disposition, there was no association with composite 30-serious outcomes (adjusted odds ratio, 0.82 [95%CI, 0.62-1.09], p = 0.18).ConclusionsIn a cohort of older adult patients presenting with syncope who were able to have orthostatic vital signs evaluated, abnormal orthostatic vital signs did not independently predict composite 30-day serious outcomes.
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- 2019
12. Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Management of Adult Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Approved by ACEP Board of Directors, February 1, 2023 Clinical Policy Endorsed by the Emergency Nurses Association (April 5, 2023)
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Valente, Jonathan H., Anderson, John D., Paolo, William F., Sarmiento, Kelly, Tomaszewski, Christian A., Haukoos, Jason S., Diercks, Deborah B., Byyny, Richard, Carpenter, Christopher R., Friedman, Benjamin, Gemme, Seth R., Gerardo, Charles J., Godwin, Steven A., Hahn, Sigrid A., Hatten, Benjamin W., Kaji, Amy, Kwok, Heemun, Lo, Bruce M., Mace, Sharon E., Moran, Maggie, Promes, Susan B., Shah, Kaushal H., Shih, Richard D., Silvers, Scott M., Slivinski, Andrea, Smith, Michael D., Thiessen, Molly E.W., Trent, Stacy, Wall, Stephen P., Westafer, Lauren M., Yu, Yanling, Cantrill, Stephen V., Finnell, John T., Schulz, Travis, and Vandertulip, Kaeli
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- 2023
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13. Interpreting High-Sensitive Troponins in Patients with Hypertension
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McHugh, Mary C. and Diercks, Deborah B.
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- 2022
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14. Pathophysiology and Definition of the Acute Coronary Syndromes
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Alavi, Mani M., Diercks, Deborah B., Toth, Peter P., Series Editor, Pena, Margarita, editor, Osborne, Anwar, editor, and Peacock, W. Frank, editor
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- 2022
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15. Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Evaluation of Adult Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Acute Blunt Trauma
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Gerardo, Charles J., Blanda, Michelle, Garg, Nidhi, Shah, Kaushal H., Byyny, Richard, Wolf, Stephen J., Diercks, Deborah B., Wolf, Stephen J., Diercks, Deborah B., Anderson, John, Byyny, Richard, Carpenter, Christopher R., Finnell, John T., Friedman, Benjamin W., Gemme, Seth R., Gerardo, Charles J., Godwin, Steven A., Hahn, Sigrid A., Hatten, Benjamin W., Haukoos, Jason S., Kaji, Amy, Kwok, Heemun, Lo, Bruce M., Mace, Sharon E., Moran, Maggie, Promes, Susan B., Shah, Kaushal H., Shih, Richard D., Silvers, Scott M., Slivinski, Andrea, Smith, Michael D., Thiessen, Molly E.W., Tomaszewski, Christian A., Trent, Stacy A., Valente, Jonathan H., Wall, Stephen P., Westafer, Lauren M., Yu, Yanling, Cantrill, Stephen V., Schulz, Travis, and Vandertulip, Kaeli
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- 2024
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16. Clinical Benefit of Hospitalization for Older Adults With Unexplained Syncope: A Propensity-Matched Analysis
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Probst, Marc A, Su, Erica, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Aging ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Incidence ,Male ,Medically Unexplained Symptoms ,Middle Aged ,Patient Discharge ,Propensity Score ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Syncope ,United States ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
Study objectiveMany adults with syncope are hospitalized solely for observation and testing. We seek to determine whether hospitalization versus outpatient management for older adults with unexplained syncope is associated with a reduction in postdisposition serious adverse events at 30 days.MethodsWe performed a propensity score analysis using data from a prospective, observational study of older adults with unexplained syncope or near syncope who presented to 11 emergency departments (EDs) in the United States. We enrolled adults (≥60 years) who presented with syncope or near syncope. We excluded patients with a serious diagnosis identified in the ED. Clinical and laboratory data were collected on all patients. The primary outcome was rate of post-ED serious adverse events at 30 days.ResultsWe enrolled 2,492 older adults with syncope and no serious ED diagnosis from April 2013 to September 2016. Mean age was 73 years (SD 8.9 years), and 51% were women. The incidence of serious adverse events within 30 days after the index visit was 7.4% for hospitalized patients and 3.19% for discharged patients, representing an unadjusted difference of 4.2% (95% confidence interval 2.38% to 6.02%). After propensity score matching on risk of hospitalization, there was no statistically significant difference in serious adverse events at 30 days between the hospitalized group (4.89%) and the discharged group (2.82%) (risk difference 2.07%; 95% confidence interval -0.24% to 4.38%).ConclusionIn our propensity-matched sample of older adults with unexplained syncope, for those with clinical characteristics similar to that of the discharged cohort, hospitalization was not associated with improvement in 30-day serious adverse event rates.
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- 2019
17. Recurrent syncope is not an independent risk predictor for future syncopal events or adverse outcomes
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Chang, Anna Marie, Hollander, Judd E, Su, Erica, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Heart Disease ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Recurrence ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Syncope ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Almost 20% of patients with syncope will experience another event. It is unknown whether recurrent syncope is a marker for a higher or lower risk etiology of syncope. The goal of this study is to determine whether older adults with recurrent syncope have a higher likelihood of 30-day serious clinical events than patients experiencing their first episode.MethodsThis study is a pre-specified secondary analysis of a multicenter prospective, observational study conducted at 11 emergency departments in the US. Adults 60 years or older who presented with syncope or near syncope were enrolled. The primary outcome was occurrence of 30-day serious outcome. The secondary outcome was 30-day serious cardiac arrhythmia. In multivariate analysis, we assessed whether prior syncope was an independent predictor of 30-day serious events.ResultsThe study cohort included 3580 patients: 1281 (35.8%) had prior syncope and 2299 (64.2%) were presenting with first episode of syncope. 498 (13.9%) patients had 1 prior episode while 771 (21.5%) had >1 prior episode. Those with recurrent syncope were more likely to have congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease, previous diagnosis of arrhythmia, and an abnormal ECG. Overall, 657 (18.4%) of the cohort had a serious outcome by 30 days after index ED visit. In multivariate analysis, we found no significant difference in risk of events (adjusted odds ratio 1.09; 95% confidence interval 0.90-1.31; p = 0.387).ConclusionIn older adults with syncope, a prior history of syncope within the year does not increase the risk for serious 30-day events.
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- 2019
18. Do High‐sensitivity Troponin and Natriuretic Peptide Predict Death or Serious Cardiac Outcomes After Syncope?
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Clark, Carol L, Gibson, Thomas A, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Cardiovascular ,Emergency Care ,Heart Disease ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Case-Control Studies ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Natriuretic Peptide ,Brain ,Peptide Fragments ,Prospective Studies ,Syncope ,Troponin T ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES:An estimated 1.2 million annual emergency department (ED) visits for syncope/near syncope occur in the United States. Cardiac biomarkers are frequently obtained during the ED evaluation, but the prognostic value of index high-sensitivity troponin (hscTnT) and natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) are unclear. The objective of this study was to determine if hscTnT and NT-proBNP drawn in the ED are independently associated with 30-day death/serious cardiac outcomes in adult patients presenting with syncope. METHODS:A prespecified secondary analysis of a prospective, observational trial enrolling participants ≥ age 60 presenting with syncope, at 11 United States hospitals, was conducted between April 2013 and September 2016. Exclusions included seizure, stroke, transient ischemic attack, trauma, intoxication, hypoglycemia, persistent confusion, mechanical/electrical invention, prior enrollment, or predicted poor follow-up. Within 3 hours of consent, hscTnT and NT-proBNP were collected and later analyzed centrally using Roche Elecsys Gen 5 STAT and 2010 Cobas, respectively. Primary outcome was combined 30-day all-cause mortality and serious cardiac events. Adjusting for illness severity, using multivariate logistic regression analysis, variations between primary outcome and biomarkers were estimated, adjusting absolute risk associated with ranges of biomarkers using Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods. RESULTS:The cohort included 3,392 patients; 367 (10.8%) experienced the primary outcome. Adjusted absolute risk for the primary outcome increased with hscTnT and NT-proBNP levels. HscTnT levels ≤ 5 ng/L were associated with a 4% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 3%-5%) outcome risk, and hscTnT > 50 ng/L, a 29% (95% CI = 26%-33%) risk. NT-proBNP levels ≤ 125 ng/L were associated with a 4% (95% CI = 4%-5%) risk, and NT-proBNP > 2,000 ng/L a 29% (95% CI = 25%-32%) risk. Likelihood ratios and predictive values demonstrated similar results. Sensitivity analyses excluding ED index serious outcomes demonstrated similar findings. CONCLUSIONS:hscTnT and NT-proBNP are independent predictors of 30-day death and serious outcomes in older ED patients presenting with syncope.
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- 2019
19. Comparison of 30-Day Serious Adverse Clinical Events for Elderly Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Near-Syncope Versus Syncope
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Bastani, Aveh, Su, Erica, Adler, David H, Baugh, Christopher, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Malveau, Susan E, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, Yagapen, Annick N, Weiss, Robert E, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Cardiovascular ,Lung ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Emergency Care ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Case-Control Studies ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Syncope ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
Study objectiveControversy remains in regard to the risk of adverse events for patients presenting with syncope compared with near-syncope. The purpose of our study is to describe the difference in outcomes between these groups in a large multicenter cohort of older emergency department (ED) patients.MethodsFrom April 28, 2013, to September 21, 2016, we conducted a prospective, observational study across 11 EDs in adults (≥60 years) with syncope or near-syncope. A standardized data extraction tool was used to collect information during their index visit and at 30-day follow-up. Our primary outcome was the incidence of 30-day death or serious clinical events. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression analysis adjusting for relevant demographic or historical variables.ResultsA total of 3,581 patients (mean age 72.8 years; 51.6% men) were enrolled in the study. There were 1,380 patients (39%) presenting with near-syncope and 2,201 (61%) presenting with syncope. Baseline characteristics revealed a greater incidence of congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease, previous arrhythmia, nonwhite race, and presenting dyspnea in the near-syncope compared with syncope cohort. There were no differences in the primary outcome between the groups (near-syncope 18.7% versus syncope 18.2%). A multivariate logistic regression analysis identified no difference in 30-day serious outcomes for patients with near-syncope (odds ratio 0.94; 95% confidence interval 0.78 to 1.14) compared with syncope.ConclusionNear-syncope confers risk to patients similar to that of syncope for the composite outcome of 30-day death or serious clinical event.
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- 2019
20. Creating Consensus: Revisiting the Emergency Medicine Resident Scholarly Activity Requirement
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Kane, Bryan G., Totten, Vicken Y., Kraus, Chadd K., Allswede, Michael, Diercks, Deborah B., Garg, Nidhi, Ling, Louis, McDonald, Eric N., Rosenau, Alex M., Wilk, Mike, Holmes, Alexandria D., Hemminger, Adam, and Greenberg, Marna Rayl
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resident ,scholarly activity - Abstract
Introduction: In the context of the upcoming single accreditation system for graduate medical education resulting from an agreement between the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), American Osteopathic Association and American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine, we saw the opportunity for charting a new course for emergency medicine (EM) scholarly activity (SA). Our goal was to engage relevant stakeholders to produce a consensus document. Methods: Consensus building focused on the goals, definition, and endpoints of SA. Representatives from stakeholder organizations were asked to help develop a survey regarding the SA requirement. The survey was then distributed to those with vested interests. We used the preliminary data to find areas of concordance and discordance and presented them at a consensus-building session. Outcomes were then re-ranked. Results: By consensus, the primary role(s) of SA should be the following: 1) instruct residents in the process of scientific inquiry; 2) expose them to the mechanics of research; 3) teach them lifelong skills, including search strategies and critical appraisal; and 4) teach them how to formulate a question, search for the answer, and evaluate its strength. To meet these goals, the activity should have the general elements of hypothesis generation, data collection and analytical thinking, and interpretation of results. We also determined consensus on the endpoints, and acceptable documentation of the outcome. Conclusion: This consensus document may serve as a best-practices guideline for EM residency programs by delineating the goals, definitions, and endpoints for EM residents’ SA. However, each residency program must evaluate its available scholarly activity resources and individually implement requirements by balancing the ACGME Review Committee for Emergency Medicine requirements with their own circumstances.
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- 2019
21. Response to “Creating Consensus: Revisiting the Emergency Medicine Scholarly Activity Requirement”
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Pasichow, Scott H., Jarou, Zachary J., Nikolla, Dhimitri A., Qureshi, Mohammed M., Epter, Michael L, Kane, Bryan G., Totten, Vicken Y., Kraus, Chadd K., Allswede, Michael, Diercks, Deborah B., Garg, Nidhi, Ling, Louis, McDonald, Eric N., Rosenau, Alex M., Wilk, Mike, Holmes, Alexandria D., Hemminger, Adam, and Greenberg, Marna Rayl
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Scholarly Activity ,Consensus ,Emergency Medicine ,Residency ,Resident - Published
- 2019
22. Predictors of Clinically Significant Echocardiography Findings in Older Adults with Syncope: A Secondary Analysis
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Probst, Marc A, Gibson, Thomas A, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Heart Disease ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Aged ,Echocardiography ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Syncope ,Clinical Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundSyncope is a common reason for visiting the emergency department (ED) and is associated with significant healthcare resource utilization.ObjectiveTo develop a risk-stratification tool for clinically significant findings on echocardiography among older adults presenting to the ED with syncope or nearsyncope.DesignProspective, observational cohort study from April 2013 to September 2016.SettingEleven EDs in the United States.PatientsWe enrolled adults (=60 years) who presented to the ED with syncope or near-syncope who underwent transthoracic echocardiography (TTE).MeasurementsThe primary outcome was a clinically significant finding on TTE. Clinical, electrocardiogram, and laboratory variables were also collected. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to identify predictors of significant findings on echocardiography.ResultsA total of 3,686 patients were enrolled. Of these, 995 (27%) received echocardiography, and 215 (22%) had a significant finding on echocardiography. Regression analysis identified five predictors of significant finding: (1) history of congestive heart failure, (2) history of coronary artery disease, (3) abnormal electrocardiogram, (4) high-sensitivity troponin-T >14 pg/mL, and 5) N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide >125 pg/mL. These five variables make up the ROMEO (Risk Of Major Echocardiography findings in Older adults with syncope) criteria. The sensitivity of a ROMEO score of zero for excluding significant findings on echocardiography was 99.5% (95% CI: 97.4%-99.9%) with a specificity of 15.4% (95% CI: 13.0%-18.1%).ConclusionsIf validated, this risk-stratification tool could help clinicians determine which syncope patients are at very low risk of having clinically significant findings on echocardiography.RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT01802398.
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- 2018
23. 2022 ACC Expert Consensus Decision Pathway on the Evaluation and Disposition of Acute Chest Pain in the Emergency Department: A Report of the American College of Cardiology Solution Set Oversight Committee
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Kontos, Michael C., de Lemos, James A., Deitelzweig, Steven B., Diercks, Deborah B., Gore, M. Odette, Hess, Erik P., McCarthy, Cian P., McCord, James K., Musey, Paul I., Jr., Villines, Todd C., and Wright, Leesa J.
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- 2022
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24. Performance of the American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology/Heart Rhythm Society versus European Society of Cardiology guideline criteria for hospital admission of patients with syncope
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Widmer, Velina, Leu, Kathrin, Reichlin, Tobias, Shrestha, Samyut, Freese, Michael, Krisai, Philipp, Belkin, Maria, Kawecki, Damian, Morawiec, Beata, Muzyk, Piotr, Nowalany-Kozielska, Ewa, Geigy, Nicolas, Martinez-Nadal, Gemma, Fuenzalida Inostroza, Carolina Isabel, Mandrión, José Bustamante, Poepping, Imke, Greenslade, Jaimi, Hawkins, Tracey, Rentsch, Katharina, Mitrovic, Sandra, von Eckardstein, Arnold, Buser, Andreas, Osswald, Stefan, Walter, Joan, Adler, David H., Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W., Caterino, Jeffrey M., Diercks, Deborah B., Hollander, Judd E., Nicks, Bret A., Nishijima, Daniel K., Shah, Manish N., Stiffler, Kirk A., Wilber, Scott T., Storrow, Alan B., du Fay de Lavallaz, Jeanne, Zimmermann, Tobias, Badertscher, Patrick, Lopez-Ayala, Pedro, Nestelberger, Thomas, Miró, Òscar, Salgado, Emilio, Zaytseva, Xenia, Gafner, Michele Sara, Christ, Michael, Cullen, Louise, Than, Martin, Martin-Sanchez, F. Javier, Di Somma, Salvatore, Peacock, W. Frank, Keller, Dagmar I., Costabel, Juan Pablo, Sigal, Alan, Puelacher, Christian, Wussler, Desiree, Koechlin, Luca, Strebel, Ivo, Schuler, Sereina, Manka, Robert, Bilici, Murat, Lohrmann, Jens, Kühne, Michael, Breidthardt, Tobias, Clark, Carol L., Probst, Marc, Gibson, Thomas A., Weiss, Robert E., Sun, Benjamin C., and Mueller, Christian
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- 2022
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25. Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Evaluation and Management of Adult Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Acute Heart Failure Syndromes: Approved by ACEP Board of Directors, June 23, 2022
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Silvers, Scott M., Gemme, Seth R., Hickey, Sean, Mattu, Amal, Haukoos, Jason S., Diercks, Deborah B., Wolf, Stephen J., Byyny, Richard, Carpenter, Christopher R., Gerardo, Charles J., Godwin, Steven A., Hahn, Sigrid A., Hatten, Benjamin W., Kaji, Amy, Kwok, Heemun, Lo, Bruce M., Mace, Sharon E., Promes, Susan B., Shah, Kaushal H., Shih, Richard D., Slivinski, Andrea, Smith, Michael D., Thiessen, Molly E.W., Tomaszewski, Christian A., Valente, Jonathan H., Villars, Melissa, Wall, Stephen P., Yu, Yanling, Cantrill, Stephen V., Finnell, John T., Schulz, Travis, and Vandertulip, Kaeli
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- 2022
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26. ACR Appropriateness Criteria® Dyspnea-Suspected Cardiac Origin (Ischemia Already Excluded): 2021 Update
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Bolen, Michael A., Bin Saeedan, Mnahi Nayef, Rajiah, Prabhakar, Ahmad, Sarah, Dibble, Elizabeth H., Diercks, Deborah B., El-Sherief, Ahmed H., Farzaneh-Far, Afshin, Francois, Christopher J., Galizia, Mauricio S., Hanneman, Kate, Inacio, Joao R., Johri, Amer M., Khosa, Faisal, Krishnamurthy, Rajesh, Lenge de Rosen, Veronica, Singh, Satinder P., Teng, Kathryn, Villines, Todd C., Young, Phillip M., Zimmerman, Stefan L., and Abbara, Suhny
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- 2022
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27. SCAI SHOCK Stage Classification Expert Consensus Update: A Review and Incorporation of Validation Studies: This statement was endorsed by the American College of Cardiology (ACC), American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP), American Heart Association (AHA), European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Association for Acute Cardiovascular Care (ACVC), International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT), Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM), and Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) in December 2021.
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Naidu, Srihari S., Baran, David A., Jentzer, Jacob C., Hollenberg, Steven M., van Diepen, Sean, Basir, Mir B., Grines, Cindy L., Diercks, Deborah B., Hall, Shelley, Kapur, Navin K., Kent, William, Rao, Sunil V., Samsky, Marc D., Thiele, Holger, Truesdell, Alexander G., and Henry, Timothy D.
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- 2022
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28. 2021 AHA/ACC/ASE/CHEST/SAEM/SCCT/SCMR Guideline for the Evaluation and Diagnosis of Chest Pain: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines
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Gulati, Martha, Levy, Phillip D., Mukherjee, Debabrata, Amsterdam, Ezra, Bhatt, Deepak L., Birtcher, Kim K., Blankstein, Ron, Boyd, Jack, Bullock-Palmer, Renee P., Conejo, Theresa, Diercks, Deborah B., Gentile, Federico, Greenwood, John P., Hess, Erik P., Hollenberg, Steven M., Jaber, Wael A., Jneid, Hani, Joglar, José A., Morrow, David A., O’Connor, Robert E., Ross, Michael A., and Shaw, Leslee J.
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- 2022
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29. Outcomes of Patients With Syncope and Suspected Dementia
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Holden, Timothy R, Shah, Manish N, Gibson, Tommy A, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Nishijima, Daniel K, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Emergency Care ,Aging ,Dementia ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
ObjectivesSyncope and near-syncope are common in patients with dementia and a leading cause of emergency department (ED) evaluation and subsequent hospitalization. The objective of this study was to describe the clinical trajectory and short-term outcomes of patients who presented to the ED with syncope or near-syncope and were assessed by their ED provider to have dementia.MethodsThis multisite prospective cohort study included patients 60 years of age or older who presented to the ED with syncope or near-syncope between 2013 and 2016. We analyzed a subcohort of 279 patients who were identified by the treating ED provider to have baseline dementia. We collected comprehensive patient-level, utilization, and outcomes data through interviews, provider surveys, and chart abstraction. Outcome measures included serious conditions related to syncope and death.ResultsOverall, 221 patients (79%) were hospitalized with a median length of stay of 2.1 days. A total of 46 patients (16%) were diagnosed with a serious condition in the ED. Of the 179 hospitalized patients who did not have a serious condition identified in the ED, 14 (7.8%) were subsequently diagnosed with a serious condition during the hospitalization, and an additional 12 patients (6.7%) were diagnosed postdischarge within 30 days of the index ED visit. There were seven deaths (2.5%) overall, none of which were cardiac-related. No patients who were discharged from the ED died or had a serious condition in the subsequent 30 days.ConclusionsPatients with perceived dementia who presented to the ED with syncope or near-syncope were frequently hospitalized. The diagnosis of a serious condition was uncommon if not identified during the initial ED assessment. Given the known iatrogenic risks of hospitalization for patients with dementia, future investigation of the impact of goals of care discussions on reducing potentially preventable, futile, or unwanted hospitalizations while improving goal-concordant care is warranted.
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- 2018
30. ECG Predictors of Cardiac Arrhythmias in Older Adults With Syncope
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Nishijima, Daniel K, Lin, Amber L, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Emergency Care ,Heart Disease ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Electrocardiography ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Incidence ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Survival Rate ,Syncope ,United States ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Study objectiveCardiac arrhythmia is a life-threatening condition in older adults who present to the emergency department (ED) with syncope. Previous work suggests the initial ED ECG can predict arrhythmia risk; however, specific ECG predictors have been variably specified. Our objective is to identify specific ECG abnormalities predictive of 30-day serious cardiac arrhythmias in older adults presenting to the ED with syncope.MethodsWe conducted a prospective, observational study at 11 EDs in adults aged 60 years or older who presented with syncope or near syncope. We excluded patients with a serious cardiac arrhythmia diagnosed during the ED evaluation from the primary analysis. The outcome was occurrence of 30-day serous cardiac arrhythmia. The exposure variables were predefined ECG abnormalities. Independent predictors were identified through multivariate logistic regression. The sensitivities and specificities of any predefined ECG abnormality and any ECG abnormality identified on adjusted analysis to predict 30-day serious cardiac arrhythmia were also calculated.ResultsAfter exclusion of 197 patients (5.5%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 4.7% to 6.2%) with serious cardiac arrhythmias in the ED, the study cohort included 3,416 patients. Of these, 104 patients (3.0%; 95% CI 2.5% to 3.7%) had a serious cardiac arrhythmia within 30 days from the index ED visit (median time to diagnosis 2 days [interquartile range 1 to 5 days]). The presence of nonsinus rhythm, multiple premature ventricular conductions, short PR interval, first-degree atrioventricular block, complete left bundle branch block, and Q wave/T wave/ST-segment abnormalities consistent with acute or chronic ischemia on the initial ED ECG increased the risk for a 30-day serious cardiac arrhythmia. This combination of ECG abnormalities had a similar sensitivity in predicting 30-day serious cardiac arrhythmia compared with any ECG abnormality (76.9% [95% CI 67.6% to 84.6%] versus 77.9% [95% CI 68.7% to 85.4%]) and was more specific (55.1% [95% CI 53.4% to 56.8%] versus 46.6% [95% CI 44.9% to 48.3%]).ConclusionIn older ED adults with syncope, approximately 3% receive a diagnosis of a serious cardiac arrhythmia not recognized on initial ED evaluation. The presence of specific abnormalities on the initial ED ECG increased the risk for 30-day serious cardiac arrhythmias.
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- 2018
31. Troponin Limit of Detection Plus Cardiac Risk Stratification Scores to Rule Out Acute Myocardial Infarction and 30-Day Major Adverse Cardiac Events in ED Patients
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Datlow, Mitchell D, Gray, Kelly M, Watts, Adriel, Diercks, Deborah B, and Mumma, Bryn E
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Atherosclerosis ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Cause of Death ,Electrocardiography ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Limit of Detection ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,ROC Curve ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Survival Rate ,Time Factors ,Troponin I ,Troponin T ,United States ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems - Abstract
When screening for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), troponin levels below the 99th percentile, including those below the limit of detection (LOD), are considered normal. We hypothesized that a low-risk HEART score (0-3) or ACS Pretest Probability Assessment
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- 2017
32. Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Management of Adult Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Seizures
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Smith, Michael D., Sampson, Christopher S., Wall, Stephen P., Diercks, Deborah B., Diercks, Deborah B., Anderson, John D., Byyny, Richard, Carpenter, Christopher R., Friedman, Benjamin W., Gemme, Seth R., Gerardo, Charles J., Godwin, Steven A., Hahn, Sigrid A., Hatten, Benjamin W., Haukoos, Jason S., Kaji, Amy, Kwok, Heemun, Lo, Bruce M., Mace, Sharon E., Mattu, Amal, Moran, Maggie, Promes, Susan B., Shah, Kaushal H., Shih, Richard D., Silvers, Scott M., Slivinski, Andrea, Smith, Michael D., Thiessen, Molly E.W., Thompson, John T., Tomaszewski, Christian A., Trent, Stacy A., Valente, Jonathan H., Westafer, Lauren M., Wall, Stephen P., Yu, Yanling, Finnell, John T., Schulz, Travis, and Vandertulip, Kaeli
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- 2024
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33. 2021 AHA/ACC/ASE/CHEST/SAEM/SCCT/SCMR Guideline for the Evaluation and Diagnosis of Chest Pain: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines
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Gulati, Martha, Levy, Phillip D., Mukherjee, Debabrata, Amsterdam, Ezra, Bhatt, Deepak L., Birtcher, Kim K., Blankstein, Ron, Boyd, Jack, Bullock-Palmer, Renee P., Conejo, Theresa, Diercks, Deborah B., Gentile, Federico, Greenwood, John P., Hess, Erik P., Hollenberg, Steven M., Jaber, Wael A., Jneid, Hani, Joglar, José A., Morrow, David A., O’Connor, Robert E., Ross, Michael A., and Shaw, Leslee J.
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- 2021
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34. 2021 AHA/ACC/ASE/CHEST/SAEM/SCCT/SCMR Guideline for the Evaluation and Diagnosis of Chest Pain: Executive Summary: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines
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Gulati, Martha, Levy, Phillip D., Mukherjee, Debabrata, Amsterdam, Ezra, Bhatt, Deepak L., Birtcher, Kim K., Blankstein, Ron, Boyd, Jack, Bullock-Palmer, Renee P., Conejo, Theresa, Diercks, Deborah B., Gentile, Federico, Greenwood, John P., Hess, Erik P., Hollenberg, Steven M., Jaber, Wael A., Jneid, Hani, Joglar, José A., Morrow, David A., O’Connor, Robert E., Ross, Michael A., and Shaw, Leslee J.
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- 2021
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35. Minimizing Attrition for Multisite Emergency Care Research
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Nicks, Bret A, Shah, Manish N, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Malveau, Susan E, Nishijima, Daniel K, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, Yagapen, Annick N, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Aftercare ,Aged ,Data Collection ,Emergency Medical Services ,Health Services Research ,Humans ,Male ,Medical Records ,Middle Aged ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Patient Dropouts ,Patient Selection ,Prospective Studies ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Loss to follow-up of enrolled patients (a.k.a. attrition) is a major threat to study validity and power. Minimizing attrition can be challenging even under ideal research conditions, including the presence of adequate funding, experienced study personnel, and a refined research infrastructure. Emergency care research is shifting toward enrollment through multisite networks, but there have been limited descriptions of approaches to minimize attrition for these multicenter emergency care studies. This concept paper describes a stepwise approach to minimize attrition, using a case example of a multisite emergency department prospective cohort of over 3,000 patients that has achieved a 30-day direct phone follow-up attrition rate of
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- 2017
36. Urine metabolomic analysis to detect metabolites associated with the development of contrast induced nephropathy.
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Diercks, Deborah B, Owen, Kelly P, Kline, Jeffrey A, and Sutter, Mark E
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Contrast ,Metabolomics ,Nephropathy - Abstract
ObjectiveContrast induced nephropathy (CIN) is a result of injury to the proximal tubules. The incidence of CIN is around 11% for imaging done in the acute care setting. We aim to analyze the metabolic patterns in the urine, before and after dosing with intravenous contrast for computed tomography (CT) imaging of the chest, to determine if metabolomic changes exist in patients who develop CIN.MethodsA convenience sample of high risk patients undergoing a chest CT with intravenous contrast were eligible for enrollment. Urine samples were collected prior to imaging and 4 to 6 hours post imaging. Samples underwent gas chromatography/mass spectrometry profiling. Peak metabolite values were measured and data was log transformed. Significance analysis of microarrays and partial least squares was used to determine the most significant metabolites prior to CT imaging and within subject. Analysis of variance was used to rank metabolites associated with temporal change and CIN. CIN was defined as an increase in serum creatinine level of ≥ 0.5 mg/dL or ≥ 25% above baseline within 48 hours after contrast administration.ResultsWe sampled paired urine samples from 63 subjects. The incidence of CIN was 6/63 (9.5%). Patients without CIN had elevated urinary citric acid and taurine concentrations in the pre-CT urine. Xylulose increased in the post CT sample in patients who developed CIN.ConclusionDifferences in metabolomics patterns in patients who do and do not develop CIN exist. Metabolites may be potential early identifiers of CIN and identify patients at high-risk for developing this condition prior to imaging.
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- 2016
37. Association Between Hospital Practices and Door-in-door-out Time in ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction
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Mumma, Bryn E, Eggert, James, Mahler, Simon A, Kontos, Michael C, and Diercks, Deborah B
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Aged ,Coronary Angiography ,Electrocardiography ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Transfer ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Quality Improvement ,Retrospective Studies ,ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Time Factors ,Time-to-Treatment ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems - Abstract
BackgroundCurrent guidelines suggest a "door-in-door-out" (DIDO) time of 30 minutes or shorter for patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) who arrive at a STEMI referral hospital and are transferred to a STEMI-receiving center for primary percutaneous coronary intervention. Experts previously identified 18 system practices as critical for reducing DIDO times. The objective of this study was to describe how frequently these critical practices are used and to determine whether their use was associated with shorter DIDO times.MethodsWe surveyed 18 STEMI referral hospitals for 4 STEMI-receiving centers regarding their use of these 18 practices. The median number used was 14 practices (interquartile range 12-15). We then evaluated their association with DIDO times in all patients (n = 93) transferred from these STEMI referral hospitals to the 4 STEMI-receiving centers for primary percutaneous coronary intervention.ResultsIn univariate linear regression analyses, system-wide quality improvement programs with leaders in the emergency medical services agencies and STEMI referral hospitals were associated with shorter DIDO times (P < 0.001 for all). Overall use of system practices was not associated with DIDO times (P = 0.143). The majority (76%, 95% confidence interval: 66%-85%) of DIDO times did not meet the 30-minute goal.ConclusionsThese findings highlight the difficulty in achieving the 30-minute DIDO goal and the need for continued focus on strategies for reducing DIDO time, including system-wide quality improvement programs.
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- 2016
38. Prognosis is worse with elevated cardiac troponin in nonacute coronary syndrome compared with acute coronary syndrome
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Horiuchi, Yu, Wettersten, Nicholas, Patel, Mitul P., Mueller, Christian, Neath, Sean-Xavier, Christenson, Robert H., Morgenthaler, Nils G., McCord, James, Nowak, Richard M., Vilke, Gary M., Daniels, Lori B., Hollander, Judd E., Apple, Fred S., Cannon, Chad M., Nagurney, John T., Schreiber, Donald, deFilippi, Christopher, Hogan, Christopher, Diercks, Deborah B., Headden, Gary, Limkakeng, Alexander T., Jr., Anand, Inder, Wu, Alan H.B., Ebmeyer, Stefan, Jaffe, Allan S., Peacock, W. Frank, and Maisel, Alan
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- 2022
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39. ACR Appropriateness Criteria® Major Blunt Trauma
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Shyu, Jeffrey Y., Khurana, Bharti, Soto, Jorge A., Biffl, Walter L., Camacho, Marc A., Diercks, Deborah B., Glanc, Phyllis, Kalva, Sanjeeva P., Khosa, Faisal, Meyer, Benjamin J., Ptak, Thomas, Raja, Ali S., Salim, Ali, West, O. Clark, and Lockhart, Mark E.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Reliability of Clinical Assessments in Older Adults With Syncope or Near Syncope
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Nishijima, Daniel K, Laurie, Amber L, Weiss, Robert E, Yagapen, Annick N, Malveau, Susan E, Adler, David H, Bastani, Aveh, Baugh, Christopher W, Caterino, Jeffrey M, Clark, Carol L, Diercks, Deborah B, Hollander, Judd E, Nicks, Bret A, Shah, Manish N, Stiffler, Kirk A, Storrow, Alan B, Wilber, Scott T, and Sun, Benjamin C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Cardiovascular ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Male ,Medical History Taking ,Middle Aged ,Observer Variation ,Physical Examination ,Reproducibility of Results ,Risk Factors ,Syncope ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesClinical prediction models for risk stratification of older adults with syncope or near syncope may improve resource utilization and management. Predictors considered for inclusion into such models must be reliable. Our primary objective was to evaluate the inter-rater agreement of historical, physical examination, and electrocardiogram (ECG) findings in older adults undergoing emergency department (ED) evaluation for syncope or near syncope. Our secondary objective was to assess the level of agreement between clinicians on the patient's overall risk for death or serious cardiac outcomes.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study at 11 EDs in adults 60 years of age or older who presented with unexplained syncope or near syncope. We excluded patients with a presumptive cause of syncope (e.g., seizure) or if they were unable or unwilling to follow-up. Evaluations of the patient's past medical history and current medication use were completed by treating provider and trained research associate pairs. Evaluations of the patient's physical examination and ECG interpretation were completed by attending/resident, attending/advanced practice provider, or attending/attending pairs. All evaluations were blinded to the responses from the other rater. We calculated the percent agreement and kappa statistic for binary variables. Inter-rater agreement was considered acceptable if the kappa statistic was 0.6 or higher.ResultsWe obtained paired observations from 255 patients; mean (±SD) age was 73 (±9) years, 137 (54%) were male, and 204 (80%) were admitted to the hospital. Acceptable agreement was achieved in 18 of the 21 (86%) past medical history and current medication findings, none of the 10 physical examination variables, and three of the 13 (23%) ECG interpretation variables. There was moderate agreement (Spearman correlation coefficient, r = 0.40) between clinicians on the patient's probability of 30-day death or serious cardiac outcome, although as the probability increased, there was less agreement.ConclusionsAcceptable agreement between raters was more commonly achieved with historical rather than physical examination or ECG interpretation variables. Clinicians had moderate agreement in assessing the patient's overall risk for a serious outcome at 30 days. Future development of clinical prediction models in older adults with syncope should account for variability of assessments between raters and consider the use of objective clinical variables.
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- 2016
41. Validation of the Denver Emergency Department Trauma Organ Failure Score to Predict Post-Injury Multiple Organ Failure
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Vogel, Jody A, Newgard, Craig D, Holmes, James F, Diercks, Deborah B, Arens, Ann M, Boatright, Dowin H, Bueso, Antonio, Gaona, Samuel D, Gee, Kaitlin Z, Nelson, Anna, Voros, Jeremy J, Moore, Ernest E, Colwell, Christopher B, Haukoos, Jason S, and Network, Western Emergency Services Translational Research
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Decision Support Techniques ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multiple Organ Failure ,Organ Dysfunction Scores ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prospective Studies ,ROC Curve ,Risk Assessment ,Wounds and Injuries ,Young Adult ,Western Emergency Services Translational Research Network ,Surgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundEarly recognition of trauma patients at risk for multiple organ failure (MOF) is important to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with MOF. The objective of the study was to externally validate the Denver Emergency Department (ED) Trauma Organ Failure (TOF) Score, a 6-item instrument that includes age, intubation, hematocrit, systolic blood pressure, blood urea nitrogen, and white blood cell count, which was designed to predict the development of MOF within 7 days of hospitalization.Study designWe performed a prospective multicenter study of adult trauma patients between November, 2011 and March, 2013. The primary outcome was development of MOF within 7 days of hospitalization, assessed using the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score. Hierarchical logistic regression analysis was performed to determine associations between the Denver ED TOF Score and MOF. Discrimination was assessed and quantified using a receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve. The predictive accuracy of the Denver ED TOF score was compared with attending emergency physician estimation of the likelihood of MOF.ResultsWe included 2,072 patients with a median age of 46 years (interquartile range [IQR] 30 to 61 years); 68% were male. The median Injury Severity Score was 9 (IQR 5 to 17), and 88% of patients had blunt mechanism injury. Among participants, 1,024 patients (49%) were admitted to the ICU, and 77 (4%) died. Multiple organ failure occurred in 120 (6%; 95% CI 5% to 7%) patients and of these, 37 (31%; 95% CI 23% to 40%) died. The area under the ROC curve for the Denver ED TOF Score prediction of MOF was 0.89 (95% CI 0.86 to 0.91) and for physician estimation of the likelihood of MOF was 0.78 (95% CI 0.73 to 0.83).ConclusionsThe Denver ED TOF Score predicts development of MOF within 7 days of hospitalization. Its predictive accuracy outperformed attending emergency physician estimation of the risk of MOF.
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- 2016
42. Association between treatment at an ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction center and neurologic recovery after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
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Mumma, Bryn E, Diercks, Deborah B, Wilson, Machelle D, and Holmes, James F
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Rehabilitation ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Electrocardiography ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Nervous System Diseases ,Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest ,Recovery of Function ,Retrospective Studies ,Survival Rate ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundFor patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), the American Heart Association recommends regionalized care at cardiac resuscitation centers that are aligned with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) centers. The effectiveness of treatment at STEMI centers remains unknown.ObjectiveTo evaluate whether good neurologic recovery after OHCA is associated with treatment at an STEMI center and if volume of admitted OHCA patients is associated with good neurologic recovery.MethodsWe included patients in the 2011 California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development database with a "present on admission" diagnosis of cardiac arrest. Primary outcome was good neurologic recovery at hospital discharge. Hierarchical multiple logistic regression models were used to determine the association between treating hospital and good neurologic recovery after adjusting for patient factors (age, sex, race, ethnicity, insurance type, and ventricular arrest rhythm) and hospital factors (hospital size, intensive care unit bed days, trauma center designation, and teaching status).ResultsWe included 7,725 patients; two-thirds (5,202) were treated at an STEMI center and 1,869 (24%, 95% CI 23%-25%) had good neurologic recovery. After adjustment, treatment at an STEMI center with ≥40 and
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- 2015
43. Probabilistic Linkage of Prehospital and Outcomes Data in Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest
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Mumma, Bryn E, Diercks, Deborah B, Danielsen, Beate, and Holmes, James F
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,California ,Emergency Medical Services ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Medical Audit ,Middle Aged ,Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Retrospective Studies ,medical record linkage ,cardiac arrest ,emergency medical services ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
ObjectiveLack of longitudinal patient outcome data is an important barrier in emergency medical services (EMS) research. We aimed to demonstrate the feasibility of linking prehospital data from the California EMS Information Systems (CEMSIS) database to outcomes data from the California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) database for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).MethodsWe included patients age 18 years or older who sustained nontraumatic OHCA and were included in the 2010-2011 CEMSIS databases. The CEMSIS database is a unified EMS data collection system for California. The OSHPD database is a comprehensive data collection system for patient-level inpatient and emergency department encounters in California. OHCA patients were identified in the CEMSIS database using cardiac rhythm, procedures, medications, and provider impression. Probabilistic linkage blocks were created using in-hospital death or one of the following primary or secondary diagnoses (ICD-9-CM) in the OSHPD databases: cardiac arrest (427.5), sudden death (798), ventricular tachycardia (427.1), ventricular fibrillation (427.4), and acute myocardial infarction (410.xx). Blocking variables included incident date, gender, date of birth, age, and/or destination facility. Due to the volume of cases, match thresholds were established based on clerical record review for each block individually. Match variables included incident date, destination facility, date of birth, sex, race, and ethnicity.ResultsOf the 14,603 cases of OHCA we identified in CEMSIS, 91 (0.6%) duplicate records were excluded. Overall, 46% of the data used in the linkage algorithm were missing in CEMSIS. We linked 4,961/14,512 (34.2%) records. Linkage rates varied significantly by local EMS agency, ranging from 1.4 to 61.1% (OR for linkage 0.009-0.76; p < 0.0001). After excluding the local EMS agency with the outlying low linkage rate, we linked 4,934/12,596 (39.2%) records.ConclusionProbabilistic linkage of CEMSIS prehospital data with OSHPD outcomes data was severely limited by the completeness of the EMS data. States and EMS agencies should aim to overcome data limitations so that more effective linkages are possible.
- Published
- 2015
44. Midregional Proadrenomedullin Predicts Mortality and Major Adverse Cardiac Events in Patients Presenting With Chest Pain: Results From the CHOPIN Trial
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Shah, Kevin S, Marston, Nicholas A, Mueller, Christian, Neath, Sean-Xavier, Christenson, Robert H, McCord, James, Nowak, Richard M, Vilke, Gary M, Daniels, Lori B, Hollander, Judd E, Apple, Fred S, Cannon, Chad M, Nagurney, John, Schreiber, Donald, deFilippi, Christopher, Hogan, Christopher J, Diercks, Deborah B, Limkakeng, Alexander, Anand, Inder S, Wu, Alan HB, Clopton, Paul, Jaffe, Allan S, Peacock, W Frank, and Maisel, Alan S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Atherosclerosis ,Patient Safety ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Cardiovascular ,Chronic Pain ,Heart Disease ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acute Disease ,Adrenomedullin ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Chest Pain ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Heart Failure ,Humans ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Pravastatin ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Protein Precursors ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Severity of Illness Index ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesChest pain is a common complaint to emergency departments (EDs) and clinical risk factors are used to predict which patients are at risk for worse outcomes and mortality. The goal was to assess the novel biomarker midregional proadrenomedullin (MR-proADM) in prediction of mortality and major adverse cardiac events (MACE).MethodsThis was a subanalysis of the CHOPIN study, a 16-center prospective trial that enrolled 2,071 patients presenting with chest pain within 6 hours of onset. The primary endpoint was 6-month all-cause mortality and the secondary endpoint was 30-day and 6-month MACE: ED visits or hospitalization for acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, reinfarction, revascularization, and heart failure.ResultsMR-proADM performed similarly to troponin (cTnI; c-statistic = 0.845 and 0.794, respectively) for mortality prediction in all subjects and had similar results in those with noncardiac diagnoses. MR-proADM concentrations were stratified by decile, and the cohort in the top decile had a 9.8% 6-month mortality risk versus 0.9% risk for those in the bottom nine deciles (p
- Published
- 2015
45. Point-of-Care Ultrasonography by Pediatric Emergency Medicine Physicians
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Marin, Jennifer R, Lewiss, Resa E, Shook, Joan E, Ackerman, Alice D, Chun, Thomas H, Conners, Gregory P, Dudley, Nanette C, Fuchs, Susan M, Gorelick, Marc H, Lane, Natalie E, Moore, Brian R, Wright, Joseph L, Benjamin, Lee S, Alade, Kiyetta, Arms, Joseph, Avarello, Jahn T, Baldwin, Steven, Barata, Isabel A, Brown, Kathleen, Cantor, Richard M, Cohen, Ariel, Dietrich, Ann Marie, Eakin, Paul J, Gausche-Hill, Marianne, Gerardi, Michael, Graham, Charles J, Holtzman, Doug K, Hom, Jeffrey, Ishimine, Paul, Jinivizian, Hasmig, Joseph, Madeline, Mehta, Sanjay, Ojo, Aderonke, Paul, Audrey Z, Pauze, Denis R, Pearson, Nadia M, Rosen, Brett, Russell, W Scott, Saidinejad, Mohsen, Schwartz, Gerald R, Sloas, Harold A, Swenson, Orel, Valente, Jonathan H, Waseem, Muhammad, Whiteman, Paula J, Woolridge, Dale, Bird, Steven B, Blomkalns, Andra L, Clem, Kathleen J, Courtney, D Mark, Diercks, Deborah B, Hockberger, Robert S, Holmes, James F, Hudak, Lauren, Jones, Alan E, Kaji, Amy H, Martin, Ian BK, Noble, Vicki, Storti, Enrico, Tsung, Jim, and Volpicelli, Giovanni
- Subjects
Emergency Care ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Health Services ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Child ,Cooperative Behavior ,Credentialing ,Curriculum ,Education ,Medical ,Continuing ,Emergency Medicine ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Humans ,Interdisciplinary Communication ,Pediatrics ,Point-of-Care Systems ,Ultrasonography ,United States ,American Academy of Pediatrics ,Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine ,Society for Academic Emergency Medicine ,Academy of Emergency Ultrasound ,American College of Emergency Physicians ,Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee ,World Interactive Network Focused on Critical Ultrasound ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
Emergency physicians have used point-of-care ultrasonography since the 1990 s. Pediatric emergency medicine physicians have more recently adopted this technology. Point-of-care ultrasonography is used for various scenarios, particularly the evaluation of soft tissue infections or blunt abdominal trauma and procedural guidance. To date, there are no published statements from national organizations specifically for pediatric emergency physicians describing the incorporation of point-of-care ultrasonography into their practice. This document outlines how pediatric emergency departments may establish a formal point-of-care ultrasonography program. This task includes appointing leaders with expertise in point-of-care ultrasonography, effectively training and credentialing physicians in the department, and providing ongoing quality assurance reviews.
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- 2015
46. Point-of-Care Ultrasonography by Pediatric Emergency Medicine Physicians
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Abo, Alyssa M, Doniger, Stephanie J, Fischer, Jason W, Kessler, David O, Levy, Jason A, Noble, Vicki E, Sivitz, Adam B, Tsung, James W, Vieira, Rebecca L, Shook, Joan E, Ackerman, Alice D, Chun, Thomas H, Conners, Gregory P, Dudley, Nanette C, Fuchs, Susan M, Gorelick, Marc H, Lane, Natalie E, Moore, Brian R, Wright, Joseph L, Benjamin, Lee S, Barata, Isabel A, Alade, Kiyetta, Arms, Joseph, Avarello, Jahn T, Baldwin, Steven, Brown, Kathleen, Cantor, Richard M, Cohen, Ariel, Dietrich, Ann Marie, Eakin, Paul J, Gausche-Hill, Marianne, Gerardi, Michael, Graham, Charles J, Holtzman, Doug K, Hom, Jeffrey, Ishimine, Paul, Jinivizian, Hasmig, Joseph, Madeline, Mehta, Sanjay, Ojo, Aderonke, Paul, Audrey Z, Pauze, Denis R, Pearson, Nadia M, Rosen, Brett, Russell, W Scott, Saidinejad, Mohsen, Sloas, Harold A, Schwartz, Gerald R, Swenson, Orel, Valente, Jonathan H, Waseem, Muhammad, Whiteman, Paula J, Woolridge, Dale, Hockberger, Robert S, Diercks, Deborah B, Jones, Alan E, Blomkalns, Andra L, Courtney, D Mark, Clem, Kathleen J, Kaji, Amy H, Holmes, James F, Martin, Ian BK, Bird, Steven B, Hudak, Lauren, Noble, Vicki, Storti, Enrico, Tsung, Jim, and Volpicelli, Giovanni
- Subjects
Emergency Care ,Clinical Research ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Generic health relevance ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Pediatrics - Abstract
Point-of-care ultrasonography is increasingly being used to facilitate accurate abstract and timely diagnoses and to guide procedures. It is important for pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) physicians caring for patients in the emergency department to receive adequate and continued point-of-care ultrasonography training for those indications used in their practice setting. Emergency departments should have credentialing and quality assurance programs. PEM fellowships should provide appropriate training to physician trainees. Hospitals should provide privileges to physicians who demonstrate competency in point-of-care ultrasonography. Ongoing research will provide the necessary measures to define the optimal training and competency assessment standards. Requirements for credentialing and hospital privileges will vary and will be specific to individual departments and hospitals. As more physicians are trained and more research is completed, there should be one national standard for credentialing and privileging in point-of-care ultrasonography for PEM physicians.
- Published
- 2015
47. Characteristics of Patients That Do Not Initially Respond to Intravenous Antihypertensives in the Emergency Department: Subanalysis of the CLUE Trial
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Freiermuth, Caroline E., Chandra, Abhinav, Peacock, W. Frank, Limkakeng, Jr., Alexander T., Varon, Joseph, Baumann, Brigitte M., Borczuk, Pierre, Cannon, Chad M., Cline, David M., Diercks, Deborah B., Hiestand, Brian, Hsu, Amy, Jois, Preeti, Kaminski, Brian, Levy, Philip, Nowak, Richard M., and Schrock, Jon W.
- Subjects
hypertension ,emergency medicine ,malignant ,labetalol ,nicardepine - Abstract
Introduction: Hypertensive emergency has a high mortality risk and the treatment goal is to quicklylower blood pressure with intravenous (IV) medications. Characteristics that are associated withnon-response to IV antihypertensives have not been identified. The objective is to identify patientcharacteristics associated with resistance to IV antihypertensives.Methods: This was a subanalysis of patients enrolled in the previously described comparativeeffectiveness trial of IV nicardipine vs. labetalol use in the emergency department (CLUE) study, arandomized trial of nicardipine vs. labetalol. Non-responders were defined as those patients whodid not achieve target systolic blood pressure (SBP), as set by the treating physician, within thirtyminutes of IV antihypertensive medication, +/- 20mmHg. Stepwise logistic regression was used toidentify covariates associated with the measurement outcomes.Results: CLUE enrolled 226 patients, 52.7% female, 76.4% black, mean age of 52.6±14.6 years,of whom 110 were treated with nicardipine and 116 with labetalol. The median (IQR) initial systolicblood pressure was 211mmHg (198, 226), 210 (200, 230), and 211mmHg (198,226), for the total,non-responder, and responder cohorts, respectively (p-value=0.65, 95% CI [-5.8-11.3]). Twentyninewere non-responders, 9 in the nicardipine and 20 in the labetalol group. In univariate analysis,several symptoms suggestive of end organ damage were associated with non-response. Aftermultiple variable logistic regression (AUC = 0.72), treatment with labetalol (OR 2.7, 95% CI [1.1-6.7]), history of stroke (OR 5.4, 95% CI [1.6-18.5]), and being male (OR 3.3, 95% CI [1.4-8.1]) wereassociated with failure to achieve target blood pressure.Conclusion: Male gender and history of previous stroke are associated with difficult to controlblood pressure. [West J Emerg Med. 2015;16(2):276–283.]
- Published
- 2015
48. Hemodynamic Effects of Nitroglycerin Ointment in Emergency Department Patients
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Mumma, Bryn E, Dhingra, Kapil R, Kurlinkus, Charley, and Diercks, Deborah B
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Adult ,Aged ,Arterial Pressure ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Heart Failure ,Heart Rate ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nitroglycerin ,Pilot Projects ,Prospective Studies ,Regression Analysis ,Vascular Resistance ,Vasodilator Agents ,heart failure ,nitroglycerin ,impedance cardiography ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundNitroglycerin ointment is commonly used in the treatment of emergency department (ED) patients with suspected acute heart failure (AHF) or suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS), but its hemodynamic effects in this population are not well described.ObjectiveOur objective was to assess the effect of nitroglycerin ointment on mean arterial pressure (MAP) and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) in ED patients receiving nitroglycerin. We hypothesized that nitroglycerin ointment would result in a reduction of MAP and SVR in the acute treatment of patients.MethodsWe conducted a prospective, observational pilot study in a convenience sample of adult patients from a single ED who were treated with nitroglycerin ointment. Impedance cardiography was used to measure MAP, SVR, cardiac output (CO), stroke volume (SV), and thoracic fluid content (TFC) at baseline and at 30, 60, and 120 min after application of nitroglycerin ointment. Mixed effects regression models with random slope and random intercept were used to analyze changes in hemodynamic parameters from baseline to 30, 60, and 120 min after adjusting for age, sex, and final ED diagnosis of AHF.ResultsSixty-four subjects with mean age of 55 years (interquartile range, 48-67 years) were enrolled; 59% were male. In the adjusted analysis, MAP and TFC decreased after application of nitroglycerin ointment (p=0.001 and p=0.043, respectively). Cardiac index, CO, SVR, and SV showed no change (p=0.113, p=0.085, p=0.570, and p=0.076, respectively) over time.ConclusionsAmong ED patients who are treated with nitroglycerin ointment, MAP and TFC decrease over time. However, other hemodynamic parameters do not change after application of nitroglycerin ointment in these patients.
- Published
- 2014
49. Association between prehospital electrocardiogram use and patient home distance from the percutaneous coronary intervention center on total reperfusion time in ST-segment–elevation myocardial infarction patients: A retrospective analysis from the National Cardiovascular Data Registry
- Author
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Mumma, Bryn E, Kontos, Michael C, Peng, S Andrew, and Diercks, Deborah B
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Ambulances ,Angioplasty ,Balloon ,Coronary ,Cohort Studies ,Electrocardiography ,Emergency Medical Services ,Female ,Geography ,Humans ,Linear Models ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Retrospective Studies ,Time-to-Treatment ,Treatment Outcome ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundCurrent guidelines recommend ≤90 minutes from first medical contact to percutaneous coronary intervention (FMC2B) for ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients. We evaluated the relationship between patient home distance from a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) center, prehospital electrocardiogram (ECG) use, and FMC2B time among patients with STEMI.MethodsWe performed a retrospective cohort study including all STEMI patients in the ACTION-Get With The Guidelines registry from July 1, 2008, to September 30, 2012, who were transported by ambulance to a PCI center. Patient home distance was defined as the driving distance from the patient's home zip code to the PCI center address. Distance was classified into tertiles, and linear regression was used to characterize the interaction between prehospital ECG use and patient home distance with respect to FMC2B time.ResultsOf the 29,506 STEMI patients, 19,690 (67%) received a prehospital ECG. The median patient home distance to the PCI center was 11.0 miles among patients with and 9.9 miles among those without a prehospital ECG. Prehospital ECGs were associated with a 10-minute reduction in the FMC2B time (P < .0001), which was consistent across distance tertiles (11 vs 11 vs 10 minutes). The association between prehospital ECGs and shorter FMC2B was attenuated by 0.8 minute for every 10-mile increase in distance (interaction P = .0002).ConclusionsPrehospital ECGs are associated with a 10-minute reduction in the FMC2B time. However, patient home distance from a PCI center does not substantially change this association.
- Published
- 2014
50. Minimizing Transfer Time to an ST Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction-Receiving Center
- Author
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Mumma, Bryn E, Williamson, Conrad, Khare, Rahul K, Mackey, Kevin E, and Diercks, Deborah B
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Cardiology Service ,Hospital ,Consensus ,Emergency Medical Services ,Humans ,Myocardial Infarction ,Patient Care Team ,Patient Transfer ,Time Factors ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems - Abstract
Of patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), approximately two thirds present to a hospital not capable of percutaneous coronary intervention. Transfer to a STEMI-receiving center delays time to reperfusion in patients with STEMI, but factors that affect this delay have not been well studied. We performed a 3-round modified Delphi study to identify system practices that minimize transfer time to a STEMI-receiving center. A comprehensive literature review was used to identify candidate system practices. Emergency medical services, emergency medicine, and cardiology experts were invited to participate. Consensus was defined as 80% agreement that a variable was "very important (5)" or "important (4)" with a mean score ≥ 4.25 or 80% agreement that a variable was "not important (1)" or "somewhat important (2)" with a mean score ≤ 1.75. In round 1, participants rated the candidate items and suggested additional items. Individual feedback was provided, and participants discussed items via conference calls before rating them again in round 2. In round 3, participants ranked the consensus items from rounds 1-2 from most to least important, and the mean score for each item was calculated. Of the 98 experts invited, 29 participated in round 1, 22 in round 2, and 14 in round 3. Participants identified 18 system practices that they agree are critical in minimizing transfer time to STEMI-receiving centers, with the most important being performance of a prehospital electrocardiogram and having established transfer protocols. These factors should be considered in the development of STEMI systems of care.
- Published
- 2014
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