Sacks Jeffrey H, Flueckiger Peter B, Spandorfer Philip R, Mahle William T, Costello Brian E
From the *Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine; †Sibley Heart Center at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, GA; ‡Department of Medicine, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC; §Emergency Services, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta; ∥Pediatric Emergency Medicine Associates; and ¶Department of Emergency Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
Pediatr Emerg Care. 2017 Nov;33(11):740-744. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000001081.
The American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association guidelines for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) recommend immediate aspirin (ASA) administration, an electrocardiogram (ECG) in less than 10 minutes, and a door-in to door-out (DIDO) time less than 30 minutes for interfacility transfer. We sought to determine if compliance is hindered when adults with suspected ACS present to pediatric facilities.
Visits to the 2 tertiary care emergency departments of a pediatric healthcare system using an adult chest pain protocol were examined from October 2006 to September 2012. Patients older than 18 years with a diagnosis suggestive of ACS and an initial ECG interpretation were identified. Proportions of patients receiving ASA were calculated as well as median times to ECG and DIDO. Bivariate analysis of ECG and DIDO time and the proportion of the patients receiving ASA was conducted for ECG findings positive and negative for ACS.
One hundred thirteen patients were identified. Aspirin was administered in 69% of eligible cases. Electrocardiogram and DIDO times met recommended intervals in 42% (median, 12 minutes) and 5% (median, 59 minutes) of the patients, respectively. No significant differences between positive (22% of total) and negative (78% of total) ECG findings groups were detected in median DIDO time (57 vs 59 minutes, P = 0.99), time to ECG (14 vs 12 minutes, P = 0.45), or the proportion receiving ASA (84% vs 64%, P = 0.08).
Despite the use of an emergency department protocol, compliance with the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association guidelines for adults with suspected ACS remained challenging at this pediatric center. The ECG findings did not seem to impact ASA administration, ECG time, or DIDO time.
美国心脏病学会基金会/美国心脏协会关于急性冠状动脉综合征(ACS)的指南建议立即给予阿司匹林(ASA),在10分钟内进行心电图(ECG)检查,且院间转运的门到门(DIDO)时间少于30分钟。我们试图确定疑似ACS的成年人前往儿科医疗机构就诊时,指南的依从性是否会受到影响。
对2006年10月至2012年9月期间使用成人胸痛诊疗方案的一家儿科医疗系统的2个三级护理急诊科的就诊情况进行了检查。确定了年龄大于18岁、诊断提示ACS且有初始心电图解读结果的患者。计算了接受ASA治疗的患者比例以及进行ECG检查和DIDO的中位时间。对ECG检查结果为ACS阳性和阴性的患者进行了ECG和DIDO时间以及接受ASA治疗患者比例的双变量分析。
共确定了113例患者。69%的符合条件病例给予了阿司匹林。分别有42%(中位时间为12分钟)和5%(中位时间为59分钟)的患者的心电图检查时间和DIDO时间符合推荐间隔。在DIDO中位时间(57分钟对59分钟,P = 0.99)、心电图检查时间(14分钟对12分钟,P = 0.45)或接受ASA治疗的比例(84%对64%,P = 0.08)方面,心电图检查结果阳性组(占总数的22%)和阴性组(占总数的78%)之间未检测到显著差异。
尽管使用了急诊科诊疗方案,但在这家儿科中心,对于疑似ACS的成年人,遵循美国心脏病学会基金会/美国心脏协会的指南仍具有挑战性。心电图检查结果似乎并未影响ASA的使用、心电图检查时间或DIDO时间。