1. The clinical course of patients with acute myocardial infarction who are unsuitable for thrombolytic therapy because of the presenting electrocardiogram
- Author
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P. S. C. Wong, Derek R. Robinson, N. El Gaylani, K. Griffith, G. Dixon, and R. M. Norris
- Subjects
ST depression ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,ST elevation ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,Case fatality rate ,medicine ,Cardiology ,ST segment ,Myocardial infarction ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Electrocardiography - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the clinical characteristics and 30-day fatality rate among patients with electrocardiograms (ECGs) ineligible for fibrinolysis in a consecutive series in four general hospitals in the UK. METHODS: We studied 2439 consecutive patients who were identified from regular ward visits, surveillance of results from hospital laboratories, and hospital discharge coding. RESULTS: Thirty percent (732) of patients did not have ECGs eligible for fibrinolysis therapy, while indications were uncertain in 55 (2%). Within the ineligible group, patients presenting with ST depression (n = 294) had a higher 30-day fatality rate than those with ST elevation or left bundle branch block (26% versus 17%; P < 0.001); they represented 40% of the group ineligible for fibrinolysis therapy, or 12% of the total cohort. Thirty-day fatality rates in patients presenting with pathological Q waves and no diagnostic ST segment changes (n = 130), those with T wave changes but no other abnormality (n = 168) and those with a normal ECG (n = 128) were 10%, 5% and 3%, respectively. Despite their high fatality rate, fewer patients with ST depression were admitted to coronary care units than those with ECGs eligible for fibrinolysis therapy (61% versus 85%; P < 0.001) and 23% did not receive heparin. The coronary anatomy in a subset of patients with ST depression showed two- or three-vessel disease in 79% and left main stenosis in 9%. The rates of coronary revascularisation were low in all groups (< 10%). CONCLUSION: Patients with ECGs ineligible for fibrinolysis therapy are a disparate group, with a high rate of fatality occurring in patients who present with ST depression. The high prevalence of multiple vessel coronary disease in patients with ST depression suggests that a more active management strategy is required.
- Published
- 1998