Cargando…

Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department

AIMS: The goals of this study were to apply the 2001 ACEP recommendations for admission to hospital after a syncopal event and to validate the OESIL risk stratification score, in patients with syncope admitted to a general internal medicine ward. METHODS: A retrospective study applied the 2001 ACEP...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Baranchuk, Adrian, McIntyre, William, Harper, William, Morillo, Carlos A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Indian Heart Rhythm Society 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3184449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21994471
_version_ 1782213100007587840
author Baranchuk, Adrian
McIntyre, William
Harper, William
Morillo, Carlos A
author_facet Baranchuk, Adrian
McIntyre, William
Harper, William
Morillo, Carlos A
author_sort Baranchuk, Adrian
collection PubMed
description AIMS: The goals of this study were to apply the 2001 ACEP recommendations for admission to hospital after a syncopal event and to validate the OESIL risk stratification score, in patients with syncope admitted to a general internal medicine ward. METHODS: A retrospective study applied the 2001 ACEP recommendations and OESIL score to all the patients admitted from the emergency department to a general internal medicine ward with a diagnosis of syncope during a 12-month period. The patients were classified as meeting criteria for 2001 ACEP class B or C recommendations and OESIL score 0-1 (low-risk for a major cardiac event) or 2-4 (high-risk for a major cardiac event). The sensitivity and specificity of each group for predicting high-risk patients was calculated. RESULTS: After applying the 2001 ACEP recommendations to our population, 25% (19 patients) were classified as level B, whereas 68% of the patients were classified as Level C. Sensitivity for ACEP level B recommendations was 100% and specificity was 81%. The ACEP level C recommendations also had 100% sensitivity but markedly reduced specificity at 26%. An OESIL score of 0-1 points was calculated for 30.6% of the population, identifying them as low-risk. An OESIL score of 2-4 points was documented in the remaining 69.4% with a mortality risk of 20 % /year. CONCLUSION: A significant proportion (30%) of patients presenting with syncope to a tertiary care University Hospital emergency department and admitted to an Internal Medicine ward were retrospectively classified as low-risk and could have potentially been managed as outpatients. Implementing current guidelines and clinical pathways for the management of syncope may improve this approach.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3184449
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Indian Heart Rhythm Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31844492011-10-12 Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department Baranchuk, Adrian McIntyre, William Harper, William Morillo, Carlos A Indian Pacing Electrophysiol J Original Article AIMS: The goals of this study were to apply the 2001 ACEP recommendations for admission to hospital after a syncopal event and to validate the OESIL risk stratification score, in patients with syncope admitted to a general internal medicine ward. METHODS: A retrospective study applied the 2001 ACEP recommendations and OESIL score to all the patients admitted from the emergency department to a general internal medicine ward with a diagnosis of syncope during a 12-month period. The patients were classified as meeting criteria for 2001 ACEP class B or C recommendations and OESIL score 0-1 (low-risk for a major cardiac event) or 2-4 (high-risk for a major cardiac event). The sensitivity and specificity of each group for predicting high-risk patients was calculated. RESULTS: After applying the 2001 ACEP recommendations to our population, 25% (19 patients) were classified as level B, whereas 68% of the patients were classified as Level C. Sensitivity for ACEP level B recommendations was 100% and specificity was 81%. The ACEP level C recommendations also had 100% sensitivity but markedly reduced specificity at 26%. An OESIL score of 0-1 points was calculated for 30.6% of the population, identifying them as low-risk. An OESIL score of 2-4 points was documented in the remaining 69.4% with a mortality risk of 20 % /year. CONCLUSION: A significant proportion (30%) of patients presenting with syncope to a tertiary care University Hospital emergency department and admitted to an Internal Medicine ward were retrospectively classified as low-risk and could have potentially been managed as outpatients. Implementing current guidelines and clinical pathways for the management of syncope may improve this approach. Indian Heart Rhythm Society 2011-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3184449/ /pubmed/21994471 Text en Copyright: © 2011 Baranchuk et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Baranchuk, Adrian
McIntyre, William
Harper, William
Morillo, Carlos A
Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department
title Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department
title_full Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department
title_fullStr Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department
title_full_unstemmed Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department
title_short Application Of The American College Of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Recommendations And a Risk Stratification Score (OESIL) For Patients With Syncope Admitted From The Emergency Department
title_sort application of the american college of emergency physicians (acep) recommendations and a risk stratification score (oesil) for patients with syncope admitted from the emergency department
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3184449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21994471
work_keys_str_mv AT baranchukadrian applicationoftheamericancollegeofemergencyphysiciansaceprecommendationsandariskstratificationscoreoesilforpatientswithsyncopeadmittedfromtheemergencydepartment
AT mcintyrewilliam applicationoftheamericancollegeofemergencyphysiciansaceprecommendationsandariskstratificationscoreoesilforpatientswithsyncopeadmittedfromtheemergencydepartment
AT harperwilliam applicationoftheamericancollegeofemergencyphysiciansaceprecommendationsandariskstratificationscoreoesilforpatientswithsyncopeadmittedfromtheemergencydepartment
AT morillocarlosa applicationoftheamericancollegeofemergencyphysiciansaceprecommendationsandariskstratificationscoreoesilforpatientswithsyncopeadmittedfromtheemergencydepartment