View clinical trials related to Chest Pain.
Filter by:During the outbreak of COVID-19, among patients with chest tightness and chest pain as the main symptoms in major medical institutions in Shanghai, China, the past medical history and rapid testing were used to quickly identify the risk stratification of the patients.
This study aimed to analyze and investigate whether the use of the PMcardio clinical assistant leads to a more efficient patient management in primary care and more accessible specialised care compared to usual standards of care and to assess the reliability and safety of the PMcardio smartphone application in the primary care use environment. Additionally, to evaluate time savings and cost saving implications of increased availability of specialised care at the primary care level.
The purpose of the study is to determine physical and mental health issues of U.S. embryologists related to their occupational characteristics, and how workplace fatigue and burnout may affect their quality of life, cynicism, interactions with patients, attention to detail, and lead to human error, the cause of the most severe IVF incidents that often make headlines and result in costly litigation. It will also correlate how the current manual workflows contribute to these health issues, and what measures can be taken to improve both working conditions and embryologists' health, and, therefore, improve patient care.
Conducting an analysis of the clinical performance of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I, tested in the out-of-hospital setting, for ruling out cardiac origin in acute onset chest pain. Acute onset chest pain is a complex symptom to narrow down in the out-of-hospital setting. This is due to the difficulty of obtaining pertinent information over the phone, and the absence of validated dispatch scores or criteria. In France, the current standard of care relies on the rapid dispatch of Emergency Medical Response Teams along with a physician in patients presenting symptoms evocative of Coronary Artery Disease or Myocardial Infarction. Typical anginal pain includes retrosternal pressure pain radiating to the jaw, neck, or left arm. Diagnostic work-up includes anamnesis, physical examination, routine blood work, and ECG. In the absence of signification ST-segment modifications, the gold standard relies on trending serum Troponin T and I in the hospital setting . This study aims to analyze the clinical performance of high-sensitivity cardiac Troponin I assays (hs-cTnI) in the out-of-hospital setting using a point-of-care device ; Atellica VTLi (Siemens Healthineers)
The investigators developed and implemented an eight-week multicomponent care management intervention for non-cardiac chest pain. Team members including a cardiologist, nurse, and psychiatrist. Impressions and recommendations were shared with the patient's primary care physician. Measures of chest pain severity, frequency and impact and measures of psychological health and health-related quality of life were completed at baseline and intervention completion.
Multicenter Nationwide Study for Analysis of the Potential Impact in Clinical Practice of Early Exclusion Protocols for Acute Myocardial Infarction with High Sensitivity Troponin T
This will be a prospective cross-sectional study evaluating a convenience sample of patients in the ED with low-risk chest pain defined by a HEART score of 3 or less.
The proposed research will be a prospective, observational study to test the hypothesis that anchoring will affect verbal pain scores in the emergency department. There will be a small retrospective aspect to this study to obtain patient satisfaction ratings.
The main aim of this study is to determine the effects of short-term treatment with hesperidin on COVID-19 symptoms in comparison with a placebo. Treatment effects will be observed through a symptoms diary that will be completed by participants throughout the study and by taking the oral temperature daily.
This study is an extension of a planned quality improvement project that aims to promote standard of care by increasing the use of evidence-based clinical decision rules amongst emergency medicine providers in the University of Utah Emergency Department. Patient-specific information from the EHR will be used to recommend the use of relevant clinical decision rules to emergency medicine providers at the point-of-care. These recommendations will be in the form of non-interruptive alerts with one-click access to the suggested decision rules through the MDCalc Connect EHR add-on application. Specific aims of the study are to determine if 1) patient-specific non-interruptive alerts increase the use of clinical decision rules amongst emergency medicine providers and 2) an increase in the use of clinical decision rules affects provider ordering habits.