NICE guidelines for the management of patients with acute chest pain: Difference between revisions

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==NICE guidelines for the management of patients with acute chest pain (DO NOT EDIT) <ref name="pmid22420013">{{cite journal |author= |title= |journal=[[]] |volume= |issue= |pages= |year= |pmid=22420013 |doi= |url= |accessdate=2012-05-08}}</ref>==
==NICE guidelines for the management of patients with acute chest pain (DO NOT EDIT) <ref name="pmid22420013">{{cite journal |author= |title= |journal=[[]] |volume= |issue= |pages= |year= |pmid=22420013 |doi= |url= |accessdate=2012-05-08}}</ref>==
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Initial Assessment and Referral to Hospital


Check immediately whether people currently have chest pain. If they are pain free, check when their last episode of pain was, particularly if they have had pain in the last 12 hours.
Determine whether the chest pain may be cardiac and therefore whether this guideline is relevant, by considering:
The history of the chest pain
The presence of cardiovascular risk factors
History of ischaemic heart disease and any previous treatment
Previous investigations for chest pain
Initially assess people for any of the following symptoms, which may indicate an ACS:
Pain in the chest and/or other areas (for example, the arms, back or jaw) lasting longer than 15 minutes
Chest pain associated with nausea and vomiting, marked sweating, breathlessness, or particularly a combination of these
Chest pain associated with haemodynamic instability
New onset chest pain or abrupt deterioration in previously stable angina, with recurrent chest pain occurring frequently and with little or no exertion, and with episodes often lasting longer than 15 minutes
Do not use people's response to glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) to make a diagnosis.
Do not assess symptoms of an ACS differently in men and women. Not all people with an ACS present with central chest pain as the predominant feature.
Do not assess symptoms of an ACS differently in ethnic groups. There are no major differences in symptoms of an ACS among different ethnic groups.
Refer people to hospital as an emergency if an ACS is suspected and:
They currently have chest pain or
They are currently pain free, but had chest pain in the last 12 hours, and a resting 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) is abnormal or not available.
If an ACS is suspected and there are no reasons for emergency referral, refer people for urgent same-day assessment if:
They had chest pain in the last 12 hours, but are now pain free with a normal resting 12-lead ECG or
The last episode of pain was 12–72 hours ago.
Refer people for assessment in hospital if an ACS is suspected and:
The pain has resolved and
There are signs of complications such as pulmonary oedema
Use clinical judgment to decide whether referral should be as an emergency or urgent same-day assessment.
If a recent ACS is suspected in people whose last episode of chest pain was more than 72 hours ago and who have no complications such as pulmonary oedema:
Carry out a detailed clinical assessment
Confirm the diagnosis by resting 12-lead ECG and blood troponin level
Take into account the length of time since the suspected ACS when interpreting the troponin level.
Use clinical judgment to decide whether referral is necessary and how urgent this should be.
Refer people to hospital as an emergency if they have a recent (confirmed or suspected) ACS and develop further chest pain.
When an ACS is suspected, start management immediately in the order appropriate to the circumstances (see section "Immediate Management of a Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome" below) and take a resting 12-lead ECG (see section "Resting 12-lead ECG" below). Take the ECG as soon as possible, but do not delay transfer to hospital.
If an ACS is not suspected, consider other causes of the chest pain, some of which may be life-threatening (see recommendations below).
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Revision as of 10:11, 9 May 2012

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-In-Chief: Cafer Zorkun, M.D., Ph.D. [2]; Priyamvada Singh, M.B.B.S. [3]

Overview

The American College of Cardiology, American Heart Association,and National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines recommends performance of ECG for all patients with cardiac chest pain. Additionally, chest X-rays in patients with suspected congestive heart failure, aortic dissection, aortic aneurysm, valvular heart disease, pericardial disease. However, the guidelines recommend exercise testing in low and intermediate risk patients only after they have been screened for high risk features and other indications for hospital admission.

NICE guidelines for the management of patients with acute chest pain (DO NOT EDIT) [1]

Initial Assessment and Referral to Hospital

Check immediately whether people currently have chest pain. If they are pain free, check when their last episode of pain was, particularly if they have had pain in the last 12 hours. Determine whether the chest pain may be cardiac and therefore whether this guideline is relevant, by considering: The history of the chest pain The presence of cardiovascular risk factors History of ischaemic heart disease and any previous treatment Previous investigations for chest pain

Initially assess people for any of the following symptoms, which may indicate an ACS: Pain in the chest and/or other areas (for example, the arms, back or jaw) lasting longer than 15 minutes Chest pain associated with nausea and vomiting, marked sweating, breathlessness, or particularly a combination of these Chest pain associated with haemodynamic instability New onset chest pain or abrupt deterioration in previously stable angina, with recurrent chest pain occurring frequently and with little or no exertion, and with episodes often lasting longer than 15 minutes

Do not use people's response to glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) to make a diagnosis. Do not assess symptoms of an ACS differently in men and women. Not all people with an ACS present with central chest pain as the predominant feature. Do not assess symptoms of an ACS differently in ethnic groups. There are no major differences in symptoms of an ACS among different ethnic groups. Refer people to hospital as an emergency if an ACS is suspected and: They currently have chest pain or They are currently pain free, but had chest pain in the last 12 hours, and a resting 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) is abnormal or not available.

If an ACS is suspected and there are no reasons for emergency referral, refer people for urgent same-day assessment if: They had chest pain in the last 12 hours, but are now pain free with a normal resting 12-lead ECG or The last episode of pain was 12–72 hours ago.

Refer people for assessment in hospital if an ACS is suspected and: The pain has resolved and There are signs of complications such as pulmonary oedema

Use clinical judgment to decide whether referral should be as an emergency or urgent same-day assessment.

If a recent ACS is suspected in people whose last episode of chest pain was more than 72 hours ago and who have no complications such as pulmonary oedema: Carry out a detailed clinical assessment Confirm the diagnosis by resting 12-lead ECG and blood troponin level Take into account the length of time since the suspected ACS when interpreting the troponin level.

Use clinical judgment to decide whether referral is necessary and how urgent this should be.

Refer people to hospital as an emergency if they have a recent (confirmed or suspected) ACS and develop further chest pain. When an ACS is suspected, start management immediately in the order appropriate to the circumstances (see section "Immediate Management of a Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome" below) and take a resting 12-lead ECG (see section "Resting 12-lead ECG" below). Take the ECG as soon as possible, but do not delay transfer to hospital. If an ACS is not suspected, consider other causes of the chest pain, some of which may be life-threatening (see recommendations below).

References

  1. [[]]. PMID 22420013. Missing or empty |title= (help); |access-date= requires |url= (help)


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