Rowley J M, Mounser P, Harrison E A, Skene A M, Hampton J R
Department of Medicine, University of Nottingham.
Br Heart J. 1992 Mar;67(3):255-62. doi: 10.1136/hrt.67.3.255.
A register of patients with heart attacks in the Nottingham Health District has been maintained since 1973. Data from 1982 to 1984 inclusive, a period before trials of thrombolytic therapy started in Nottingham, were analysed to provide background information for the introduction of a policy of routine thrombolysis for appropriate patients.
Data were collected prospectively on all patients transported to hospital in the Nottingham Health District with suspected myocardial infarction in the years 1982-84 and on patients treated at home during that time.
Two district general hospitals responsible for all emergency admissions in the health district.
6712 patients admitted to hospital with suspected myocardial infarction and 1887 patients found dead on arrival at hospital. Approximately 1500 patients in whom a myocardial infarction was suspected were treated at home, but only 125 were identified who had a definite or probable infarction.
Among the patients admitted within 24 hours of the onset of symptoms, the median delay from onset to hospital admission was 174 minutes; 25% of patients were admitted within 91 minutes. The only factor that seemed to affect the time taken was the patient's decision to call a general practitioner or an emergency ambulance. If a general practitioner referred the patient to hospital the median delay was 247 minutes, compared with 100 minutes when the patient summoned an ambulance. Ninety three per cent of all patients were transported by ambulance. The median time from the call for the ambulance to hospital arrival was 29 minutes. Once a patient was admitted to hospital, the time to admission and general practitioner involvement seemed relatively unimportant as predictors of outcome. Patients admitted more than nine hours after onset of symptoms with a diagnosis of definite or probable infarction had a poorer outcome than those admitted earlier (in-hospital mortality 22.4% v 13.1%). The fatality rates of those admitted to a coronary care unit or to an ordinary medical ward are similar.
Although the introduction of thrombolytic therapy has brought with it an increased awareness of the need to minimise any delay in time to admission, it seems that in a predominantly urban area like Nottingham, patients with a suspected heart attack will continue to be admitted to hospital most quickly if an ambulance crew rather than a general practitioner is called. Because the ambulance crew was in contact with such patients for only a short time it seems unlikely that administration of a thrombolytic drug in the ambulance would be helpful.
自1973年起,诺丁汉健康区就一直保存着心脏病发作患者的登记册。对1982年至1984年(包括这期间)的数据进行了分析,这是诺丁汉开始溶栓治疗试验之前的一段时间,目的是为对合适患者实施常规溶栓政策提供背景信息。
前瞻性收集了1982 - 1984年期间被送往诺丁汉健康区医院的所有疑似心肌梗死患者以及在此期间在家接受治疗患者的数据。
负责该健康区所有急诊入院治疗的两家区综合医院。
6712名因疑似心肌梗死入院的患者以及1887名入院时即被发现死亡的患者。约1500名疑似心肌梗死的患者在家接受治疗,但只有125名被确诊为明确或可能的心肌梗死患者。
在症状发作后24小时内入院的患者中,从发作到入院的中位延迟时间为174分钟;25%的患者在91分钟内入院。唯一似乎影响所需时间的因素是患者决定呼叫全科医生还是急救救护车。如果全科医生将患者转诊至医院,中位延迟时间为247分钟,而患者呼叫救护车时为100分钟。所有患者中有93%是由救护车运送的。从呼叫救护车到医院到达的中位时间为29分钟。一旦患者入院,入院时间和全科医生的参与情况作为预后预测指标似乎相对不那么重要。症状发作后超过9小时入院且诊断为明确或可能心肌梗死的患者,其预后比早期入院的患者更差(住院死亡率分别为22.4%和13.1%)。入住冠心病监护病房或普通内科病房患者的死亡率相似。
尽管溶栓治疗的引入使人们更加意识到尽量减少入院时间延迟的必要性,但在像诺丁汉这样的主要城市地区,似乎如果呼叫急救人员而非全科医生,疑似心脏病发作的患者将继续最快入院。由于急救人员与这些患者接触时间较短,在救护车上给予溶栓药物似乎不太可能有帮助。