View clinical trials related to Chest Pain.
Filter by:In this study, the investigators compare timely acquirement of 12-lead ECG using patchy-type wireless versus using standard 12-lead ECG system among patient with chest pain in ED. The purpose of this study is to determine the difference of timely acquirement of 12-lead ECG using two different systems and the difference of hospital delay in ED between two groups. The participants were randomly divided into 2 groups: one performing an ECG examination using the standard 12-lead ECG and the other using the patch-type mobile 12-lead ECG.The 12-lead ECG will be taken 2 times serially in every 15 minutes.
Chinese Cardiovascular Association is an association dedicated to establishing Chest Pain Centers in hospitals that have basic qualifications and meet pre-designed quality control targets.The vision of Chinese Cardiovascular Association is the cardiovascular health of every Chinese, and the mission is to realize the early arrival of the inflection point of cardiovascular events in China.The institute of China Heart House is responsible for the daily management and implementation of Chinese Cardiovascular Association and the implementation and management of the Chest Pain Center construction project.In order to improve standard treatment and chest pain system management to achieve better outcomes for patients, China Heart House established the chest pain center database.The database includes patients in 4129 registered hospitals in 31 provinces in China who have been admitted with chest pain.The database can reflect the clinical characteristics, treatment and outcome of patients with chest pain in China. This non-interventional, retrospective study analyzed the chest pain center database to understand the demographics, clinical characteristics, treatment patterns and clinical outcomes of patients with chest pain, and to analyze the effects of different treatment patterns, including chest pain centers and related collaborative treatment networks.The results of the study will assess the gap between the real-world situation and the recommendations of the guidelines and reflect the effect of chest pain centers and related collaborative treatment networks on the treatment process and service quality.The research results can be directly translated into the basis of medical treatment system intervention, and also provide decision-making reference for improving the certification standards and quality control of chest pain centers.
Chest pain is a very common reason for resorting to the call center. The etiologies are very varied, ranging from benign pathologies to some that may involve, in the short term, the vital prognosis such as Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS). ACS is a partial or complete occlusion of a coronary artery that causes potentially irreversible myocardial pain unless prompt treatment is undertaken. ACS represents 120 000 cases per year in France and causes about 18 000 deaths. There is currently no support score for the assessment of chest pain. However, reducing the duration of management of ACS is essential in order to hope to reduce the associated morbidity and mortality. In 2016, SAMU45's team established a predictive ACS score for the assessement of chest pain in SAMU 45 (France) based on the prospective study of 1367 patients. Seven items significantly associated with this risk of ACS could be highlighted: age, sex, smoking, typicality (potentially constrictive chest pain radiating potentially to the shoulders and / or jaw) pain, inaugural character of pain (ie first episode of this type), presence of sweats and the physician's belief to be in the presence of an ACS. These seven variables make up the SCARE score. This had good internal discrimination (AUC at 0.81) and excellent calibration ("p" of Hosmer-Lemeshow at 0.74). This score makes it possible to stratify the risk of ACS, by using epidemiological elements but also the physician's belief, whose Negative Predictive Value (VPN) proved excellent. The objective of this new project is to confirm by an external validation via a multicentric study the robustness of this score and thus be able to consider its use in front of any chest pain regulated in France by a call center.
This study would like to identify the best starting dose and infusion rate for nerve blocks and nerve catheters related to the erector spinae plane block that can improve functional status and pain control on cardiac surgery patients and minimize the necessity for opioid pain control using a continuous reassessment model.
Most patients presenting to hospital with symptoms of a heart attack are sent home without further tests once a heart attack has been ruled out. Current strategies to assess patients with a suspected heart attack involve blood tests to measure troponin, a protein released into the bloodstream when the heart muscle is damaged. Despite having had a heart attack ruled-out, some patients have unrecognised heart disease and are at risk of having a heart attack in the future. However, clinicians do not know what is the best approach to identify and treat these patients. This study will use a heart scan known as computed tomography coronary angiogram (CTCA) to look for unrecognised heart disease in patients who have had a heart attack ruled out. In an earlier study, the Investigators performed this scan in patients referred to the outpatient cardiology clinic with stable chest pain and found that this improved the diagnosis of heart disease, leading to improvement in patient care that prevented future heart attacks. Previous research from the Investigators has also found that troponin levels below those used to diagnose a heart attack may help to identify those who are at greater risk of having a heart attack in the future. The aim of this study is to find out if patients with these low levels of troponin, where a heart attack has been ruled out, will benefit from CTCA to look for unrecognised coronary heart disease.
This study will evaluate the ability of Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography (CCTA), used as a first-line diagnostic tool in women with stable chest pain and low risk for Coronary Artery Disease (CAD), to reduce the number of women requiring more than one diagnostic test to rule in or rule out CAD. Half of the participants will undergo CCTA as the first test to investigate stable chest pain, while the other half will undergo any test ordered by their family physician.
This trial compares the accuracy provided by plain film as well as ultra-low-dose-computed-tomography (ULDCT) of the chest. It also aims to analyze differences in diagnostic confidence and therapeutic consequence offered by these two imaging modalities.
CECIDOC is a prospective, monocentric and observational study comparing the diagnostic performance of ECG-base triage to a combination of ECG and cardiovascular risk factors for chest pain triage at ED.
This study aims to determine, relative to telemetry admission, if admission to an unmonitored floor bed saves resources without an increased rate of adverse events in emergency department (ED) patients admitted with chest pain and low-risk features.
The goals of this study are as follows: 1. to confirm the safe dosing of ropivacaine for the erector spinae plane block 2. develop a pharmacokinetic profile of the erector spinae plane block, which will help demonstrate how quickly and how closely toxic levels are reached when a routine dose of ropivacaine is given for this nerve block 3. assess numbness created by the erector spinae block when routine doses are administered