Chest Pain Not from Heart?
Check Again, Docs Urged
People who go to the emergency room with
chest pain and are told that it is not caused by a heart attack
or angina might want to get a second opinion. Findings from a
new study indicate that on rare occasions heart-related chest
pain is incorrectly chalked up to something else.
In the study, nearly 3 percent
of patients who were sent home with a diagnosis of non-heart chest
pain went on to have a heart attack or related problem in the
next 30 days, Dr. Chadwick Miller of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,
North Carolina, and colleagues report.
Patients with heart disease risk
factors, such as diabetes or high cholesterol, were at greatest
risk, according to the report in the Annals of Emergency Medicine.
"I would suggest patients with
high-risk features should not be considered (non-heart) unless
the treating physician is absolutely confident," Miller stated.
"Essentially, I would lower my threshold for doing a (heart) evaluation
in these patients."
While ER doctors tend to err on
the side of caution when treating patients with chest pain, often
admitting them for observation, physicians are under pressure
to cut costs, the authors note. The researchers set out to determine
whether some patients with apparent non-heart chest pain might
need additional evaluation.
The findings are based on a study
of 2992 patients who were diagnosed with non-heart chest pain.
Despite their diagnosis, 2.8 percent
of patients experienced a heart attack or related event in the
next 30 days. Factors associated with such an event included male
sex, older age, and traditional heart disease risk factors.
The average age for patients who
experienced such events was 61.2, compared to 47.9 for those who
did not. Patients who complained of weakness, as well as those
whose main complaint was not chest pain, were more likely to have
a heart-related problem.
Miller said that people diagnosed
with non-heart chest pain may "deserve closer scrutiny" in order
to identify cases that are really caused by the heart. However,
even with closer scrutiny, he says it is likely that a small percentage
of heart attacks will always be missed.
SOURCE: Annals of Emergency Medicine,
December 2004.
Reference
Source 89
November 29, 2004
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