Browsing by Subject "acute coronary syndrome"
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Item Embargo A Prospective Observational Study of Inpatient Myocardial Infarction Care in Northern Tanzania(2024) Gedion, KalipaBackground: The uptake of evidence-based secondary preventative therapy among patients with myocardial infarction (MI) patients is low in northern Tanzania, and short-term mortality is high. The aim of this study was to describe current patterns of inpatient and discharge care among hospitalized patients with MI to identify opportunities for improvement.
Methods: Adult patients (18 years old) participants with acute MI were consecutively enrolled in the emergency department of a tertiary care hospital in Moshi, Tanzania, from February 2022 through January 2023. A standardized questionnaire collecing demographic and health data was administered to participants at enrollment. During hospitalization, research assistants administered a standardized questionnaire to participants on a daily basis to collect information about symptom progression and counselling received. Information about inpatient testing and treatment were obtained directly from electronic medical records. At time of discharge, a discharge survey was administered to participants to collect information about discharge counseling and post-discharge plans for appointments and medications. Discharge prescriptions were collected directly from the medical record. Thirty days after enrollment, a follow-up survey was administered via telephone to participants to assess symptom status, medication use, and appointment attendance.
Results: Of the 73 participants with MI, 21 (29%) died during their initial hospitalization. During the hospital stay: 39 (53%) participants received aspirin, 29 (40%) received clopidogrel, 28 (38%) received dual antiplatelet therapy, 25 (34%) received a beta-blocker, and 36 (49%) received a statin. Fourty-three (59%) participants reported being informed of their diagnosis during their hospitalization, and 21 (29%) reported receiving dietary counselling. Of 9 participants who reported ongoing tobacco use, 2 (22%) reported receiving smoking cessation counseling. Of the 52 participants who survived to hospital discharge, 36 (69%) were given a follow-up appointment, 18 (35%) were prescribed aspirin, 23 (44%) were prescribed clopidogrel, 14 (27%) were prescribed dual antiplatelet therapy, 15 (29%) were prescribed a beta-blocker, and 21 (40%) were prescribed a statin. Four (5%) participants died between discharge and follow-up, resulting in an overall thirty-day mortality rate of 34%. Of the 48 participants surviving to 30 days, 14 (29%) were rehospitalized, 35 (73%) reported ongoing chest pain or dyspnea, 2 (4%) reported taking aspirin, and 4 (8%) reported taking clopidogrel.
Conclusions: There are multiple opportunities to improve uptake of evidence-based MI care during the inpatient and discharge phases of care. Further study is needed to address barriers to enhance the quality of MI care and reduce MI-associated mortality.
Item Open Access Implications of troponin testing in clinical medicine.(Current controlled trials in cardiovascular medicine, 2001-01) Goldmann, Britta U; Christenson, Robert H; Hamm, Christian W; Meinertz, Thomas; Ohman, E MagnusDuring the past decade considerable research has been conducted into the use of cardiac troponins, their diagnostic capability and their potential to allow risk stratification in patients with acute chest pain. Determination of risk in patients with suspected myocardial ischaemia is known to be as important as retrospective confirmation of a diagnosis of myocardial infarction (MI). Therefore, creatine kinase (CK)-MB - the former 'gold standard' in detecting myocardial necrosis - has been supplanted by new, more accurate biomarkers.Measurement of cardiac troponin levels constitute a substantial determinant in assessment of ischaemic heart disease, the presentations of which range from silent ischaemia to acute MI. Under these conditions, troponin release is regarded as surrogate marker of thrombus formation and peripheral embolization, and therefore new therapeutic strategies are focusing on potent antithrombotic regimens to improve long-term outcomes. Although elevated troponin levels are highly sensitive and specific indicators of myocardial damage, they are not always reflective of acute ischaemic coronary artery disease; other processes have been identified that cause elevations in these biomarkers. However, because prognosis appears to be related to the presence of troponins regardless of the mechanism of myocardial damage, clinicians increasingly rely on troponin assays when formulating individual therapeutic plans.Item Open Access Patterns of Emergency Care for Possible Acute Coronary Syndrome Among Patients with Chest Pain or Shortness of Breath at a Tanzanian Referral Hospital.(Global heart, 2020-02-06) Hertz, Julian T; Kweka, Godfrey L; Bloomfield, Gerald S; Limkakeng, Alexander T; Loring, Zak; Temu, Gloria; Mmbaga, Blandina T; Gerardo, Charles J; Sakita, Francis MBackground:Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is thought to be a rare diagnosis in sub-Saharan Africa, but little is known about diagnostic practices for patients with possible ACS symptoms in the region. Objective:To describe current care practices for patients with ACS symptoms in Tanzania to identify factors that may contribute to ACS under-detection. Methods:Emergency department patients with chest pain or shortness of breath at a Tanzanian referral hospital were prospectively observed. Medical histories were obtained, and diagnostic workups, treatments, and diagnoses were recorded. Five-year risk of cardiovascular events was calculated via the Harvard National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey risk score. Telephone follow-ups were conducted 30 days after enrollment. Results:Of 339 enrolled patients, the median (IQR) age was 60 (46, 72) years, 252 (74.3%) had hypertension, and 222 (65.5%) had >10% five-year risk of cardiovascular event. The median duration of symptoms prior to presentation was 7 days, and 314 (92.6%) reported symptoms worsened by exertion. Of participants, 170 (50.1%) received an electrocardiogram, and 9 (2.7%) underwent cardiac biomarker testing. There was no univariate association between five-year cardiovascular risk and decision to obtain an electrocardiogram (p = 0.595). The most common physician-documented diagnoses were symptomatic hypertension (104 patients, 30.7%) and heart failure (99 patients, 29.2%). Six patients (1.8%) were diagnosed with ACS, and 3 (0.9%) received aspirin. Among 284 (83.8%) patients completing 30-day follow-up, 20 (7.0%) had died. Conclusions:Many patients with ACS risk factors present to the emergency department of a Tanzanian referral hospital with possible ACS symptoms, but marked delays in care-seeking are common. Complete diagnostic workups for ACS are uncommon, ACS is rarely diagnosed or treated with evidence-based therapies, and mortality in patients with these symptoms is high. Physician practices may be contributing to ACS under-detection in Tanzania, and interventions are needed to improve ACS care.Item Open Access Provocative biomarker stress test: stress-delta N-terminal pro-B type natriuretic peptide.(Open Heart, 2018-01) Limkakeng, Alexander T; Leahy, J Clancy; Griffin, S Michelle; Lokhnygina, Yuliya; Jaffa, Elias; Christenson, Robert H; Newby, L KristinObjective:Stress testing is commonly performed in emergency department (ED) patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS). We hypothesised that changes in N-terminal pro-B type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) concentrations from baseline to post-stress testing (stress-delta values) differentiate patients with ischaemic stress tests from controls. Methods:We prospectively enrolled 320 adult patients with suspected ACS in an ED-based observation unit who were undergoing exercise stress echocardiography. We measured plasma NT-proBNP concentrations at baseline and at 2 and 4 hours post-stress and compared stress-delta NT-proBNP between patients with abnormal stress tests versus controls using non-parametric statistics (Wilcoxon test) due to skew. We calculated the diagnostic test characteristics of stress-delta NT-proBNP for myocardial ischaemia on imaging. Results:Among 320 participants, the median age was 51 (IQR 44-59) years, 147 (45.9%) were men, and 122 (38.1%) were African-American. Twenty-six (8.1%) had myocardial ischaemia. Static and stress-deltas NT-proBNP differed at all time points between groups. The median stress-deltas at 2 hours were 10.4 (IQR 6.0-51.7) ng/L vs 1.7 (IQR -0.4 to 8.7) ng/L, and at 4 hours were 14.8 (IQR 5.0-22.3) ng/L vs 1.0 (-2.0 to 10.3) ng/L for patients with ischaemia versus those without. Areas under the receiver operating curves were 0.716 and 0.719 for 2-hour and 4-hour stress-deltas, respectively. After adjusting for baseline NT-proBNP levels, the 4-hour stress-delta NT-proBNP remained significantly different between the groups (p=0.009). Conclusion:Among patients with ischaemic stress tests, static and 4-hour stress-delta NT-proBNP values were significantly higher. Further study is needed to determine if stress-delta NT-proBNP is a useful adjunct to stress testing.Item Open Access Stress-delta B-type Natriuretic Peptide Levels as a Test for Inducible Myocardial Ischemia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.(Cureus, 2020-03-02) Kheang, Sopagna; Rodrigues, Clarissa G; Vissoci, Joao Ricardo N; Hassan, Almujtaba; Muller, Christian; Muller, Deborah; Limkakeng, Alexander TBackground Cardiac ischemia induces myocardial dysfunction and ventricular wall stretch, which causes the release of B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) into the bloodstream. However, it is unclear whether inducible ischemia produces a significant change in BNP levels ("stress delta-BNP"). The objective of this study was to determine the utility of stress-delta BNP levels and its precursor NT-proBNP for detecting inducible myocardial ischemia during cardiac stress testing. Methods We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis. We searched PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Ovid. Studies examining the changes in levels of BNP and its precursor, N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), after an exercise cardiac stress test were included. Two reviewers independently analyzed titles and abstracts. Abstracts that did not provide enough information regarding eligibility criteria were kept for full-text evaluation. The same two reviewers also performed data extraction for analyses. Any disagreement was resolved by a consensus and, if it persisted, by a third reviewer adjudication. We report the median and mean values in studies in the order of sample size. Results A total of 15 studies met the inclusion criteria. Nine studies reported results in medians and six studies reported results in means. Of the nine studies, five assessed BNP alone, three assessed NT-proBNP, and one assessed both. Due to the non-normal distribution of results in these studies, they could not be meta-analyzed. Of the six studies that reported results in means, three assessed BNP and three assessed NT-proBNP. The standardized difference between normal and ischemic patients' stress-delta BNP values was -0.39 (95% confidence interval (CI): -0.61; -0.17) in a fixed-effects model and -0.73 (95% CI: -1.72; 0.28) in the random-effects model with high heterogeneity (I^2 = 94%, Q test P = 0.001). For NT-proBNP, the meta-analysis model showed no significant difference between the stress-delta test for ischemic and normal patients (standardized mean difference (SMD): -0.02, 95% CI: -0.31; 0.28). Patients without inducible ischemia appeared to have a lower baseline BNP and NT-proBNP compared to patients with inducible ischemia by stress testing. Although some studies report higher stress-delta BNP in the ischemic group, this pattern was not seen consistently across studies. There was high heterogeneity across studies which was not robust to sensitivity analysis. A random-effects model failed to find statistically significant differences in stress-delta BNP or NT-proBNP. Conclusions We failed to find a relationship between stress-delta BNP or NT-proBNP and the presence or absence of ischemia. This may be due to high heterogeneity in the underlying studies.