(Press-News.org) Physicians can reduce the number of heart failure deaths and unnecessary hospital admissions by using a new computer-based algorithm developed at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) that calculates each patient's individual risk of death. Published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, the algorithm improves upon clinical decision-making and determines whether or not a patient with heart failure should be admitted to hospital. To bring this tool into the emergency departments, Peter Munk Cardiac Centre cardiologists are developing smartphone and web-based applications to assist physicians in the emergency department to determine patients' numerical risk score in real time.
Heart failure is the most common cause of hospitalization in North American adults – over one million emergency department visits for heart failure occur annually. When a patient arrives at an Emergency Department (ED) with difficulty breathing, shortness of breath, fatigue, or chest tightness, the ED physician, consulting cardiologist or general internist must decide if the patient is at high short-term risk of death. For high and intermediate-risk patients, hospital admission is often required, but for low-risk patients, it may be safe for them to return home after receiving medical treatment, which typically involves diuretics or fluid-reducing medications.
"Doctors estimate the risk of heart failure patients in the emergency department based on best clinical judgment which may include different factors depending on their prior experience," says Dr. Douglas Lee, cardiologist in the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, scientist at ICES and Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Toronto.
"However, doctors may overestimate or underestimate the risk of death because the prognosis of heart failure patients may not be clearly apparent by a clinical assessment at the bedside."
"For those in very poor health or reasonably good health, physicians do a good job, but it's the middle group where the most improvement can be made. Some of these patients are dying at home or spending days in a hospital bed that they don't need to be in."
The lack of models that accurately predict a heart failure patient's risk of death and frequent misclassification of patients as high- or low-risk prompted Dr. Lee and his team to develop the "Emergency Heart Failure Mortality Risk Grade" (EHMRG), a risk model or algorithm using 10 simple predictors, including blood pressure, heart rate, and troponin levels, all of which are indicators of potential heart trouble. Each indicator is allocated a different weight in the algorithm based on the level of risk to the patient and the relative impact on the risk of death in the week following presentation to the ED, calculated as a percentage risk.
Prior studies have found that it may be safe for about 40 per cent of heart failure patients with cardiac symptoms to be discharged home from the ED; however one in every 11 discharged patients die within one week of coming to the ED. In the latter group, quality of care can be improved if appropriately discharged heart failure patients are assessed by their physician early after ED discharge to ensure that appropriate care is provided. Innovative programs of this type are being considered for implementation by the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre.
Heart failure is among the most expensive chronic diseases to treat. The cost to admit one patient to a hospital for eight days – the average length of stay for a Canadian heart failure patient – is estimated to be $8,000 to $12,000. Some hospitals have high rates of admission of heart failure patients, while others are more likely to discharge many of the patients who come to the ED for care. The EHMRG tool will help hospitals use precious ED and hospital resources more efficiently.
The next step is to develop web and smartphone applications so physicians can integrate the algorithm seamlessly into practice. With funding from the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre's Innovation Fund, Dr. Lee is developing smartphone and web-based applications that will assist with risk assessment, with a goal to collect data from individual physicians and hospitals, enabling comparisons between physicians and other centres, improving quality of care and influencing practice changes.
This study has global implications as well, since the EHMRG can also be used in developing countries, which are projected to increase in heart disease and heart failure burden in the future.
INFORMATION:
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) funded this study.
To view the Emergency Heart Failure Mortality Risk Grade (EHMRG) calculator, click here: http://www.ccort.ca/PC.aspx
Peter Munk Cardiac Centre
The Peter Munk Cardiac Centre is the premier cardiac centre in Canada. Since it opened in 1997, the Centre has saved and improved the lives of cardiac patients from around the world. Each year, approximately 17,000 patients receive the innovative and compassionate care from the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre multidisciplinary heart team. In addition, the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre trains more cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons than any hospital in Canada. The Centre is based at Toronto General Hospital – a member of University Health Network, which also includes Toronto Rehab, Toronto Western Hospital and Princess Margaret Hospital. All four are research hospitals affiliated with the University of Toronto.
ICES is an independent, non-profit organization that uses population-based health information to produce knowledge on a broad range of health care issues. Our unbiased evidence provides measures of health system performance, a clearer understanding of the shifting health care needs of Ontarians, and a stimulus for discussion of practical solutions to optimize scarce resources. ICES knowledge is highly regarded in Canada and abroad, and is widely used by government, hospitals, planners, and practitioners to make decisions about care delivery and to develop policy.
END
MATERIALS – Transparent performance . . .
Windshields, windows, solar panels, eyeglasses, heart stents and hundreds of other products representing a multi-billion-dollar market are potential targets for Oak Ridge National Laboratory's thin-film superhydrophobic technology. Conventional commercially available products tend to lack transparency, suitable bonding capability or both, making them largely impractical, said Tolga Aytug, one of the developers. The ORNL product, based on glass, can be produced with manufacturing processes that are cost effective and easily scaled ...
DURHAM, N.C. -- Treating adolescents for major depression can also reduce their chances of abusing drugs later on, a secondary benefit found in a five-year study of nearly 200 youths at 11 sites across the United States.
Only 10 percent of 192 adolescents whose depression receded after 12 weeks of treatment later abused drugs, compared to 25 percent of those for whom treatment did not work, according to research led by John Curry, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University.
"It turned out that whatever they responded to -- cognitive behavioral therapy, ...
Reston, Va. (June 4, 2012) – For those with esophageal cancer, initial staging of the disease is of particular importance as it determines whether to opt for a curative treatment or palliative treatment. Research presented in the June issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine shows that physicians using positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) can discern incremental staging information about the cancer, which can significantly impact management plans.
In 2012, an estimated 17,500 people will be diagnosed with esophageal cancer and 15,000 will die from ...
Researchers at the University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC) used an innovative technique to examine chemical interactions that are implicated in Parkinson's Disease.
The work details how a protein called alpha-synuclein interacting with the brain chemical dopamine can lead to protein misfolding and neuronal death.
Parkinson's Disease is a neurodegenerative disease which results in loss of motor control and cognitive function. Although the cause isn't known precisely, the disease involves the death of brain cells that produce dopamine, a chemical important in neuronal ...
Tampa, Fla. (June 4, 2012) – After carrying out a study comparing the repopulation efficiency of immature hepatic stem/progenitor cells and mature hepatocytes transplanted into liver-injured rats, a research team from Sapporo, Japan concluded that mature hepatocytes offered better repopulation efficiency than stem/progenitor cells.
Until day 14 post-transplantation, the growth of the stem/progenitor cells was faster than the mature hepatocytes, but after two weeks most of the stem/progenitor cells had died. However, the mature hepatocytes continued to survive and proliferate ...
Tampa, Fla. (June 4, 2012) – When autologous (self-donated) lung-derived mensenchymal stem cells (LMSCs) were transplanted endoscopically into 13 adult female sheep modeled with emphysema, post-transplant evaluation showed evidence of tissue regeneration with increased blood perfusion and extra cellular matrix content. Researchers concluded that their approach could represent a practical alternative to conventional stem cell-based therapy for treating emphysema.
The study is published in Cell Transplantation (21:1), now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/.
...
The mosquito is possibly summer's biggest nuisance. Sprays, pesticides, citronella candles, bug zappers — nothing seems to totally deter the blood-sucking insect. And neither can rain apparently.
Even though a single raindrop can weigh 50 times more than a mosquito, the insect is still able to fly through a downpour.
Georgia Tech researchers used high-speed videography to determine how this is possible. They found the mosquito's strong exoskeleton and low mass render it impervious to falling raindrops.
The research team, led by Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A new Purdue University-developed process for creating biofuels has shown potential to be cost-effective for production scale, opening the door for moving beyond the laboratory setting.
A Purdue economic analysis shows that the cost of the thermo-chemical H2Bioil method is competitive when crude oil is about $100 per barrel when using certain energy methods to create hydrogen needed for the process. If a federal carbon tax were implemented, the biofuel would become even more economical.
H2Bioil is created when biomass, such as switchgrass or corn ...
As voters increasingly rely on websites of presidential primary candidates for news, they run a risk because candidates' online attacks are not vetted through traditional "watchdog journalists" and other gatekeepers to determine accuracy or fairness, according to a study by Baylor University researchers.
"The primary danger is that constituents often use this one-sided information to decide how to vote," said Mia Moody, Ph.D., study co-author and an assistant professor of journalism, public relations and new media in Baylor's College of Arts & Sciences.
The study — "Not ...
AUDIO:
Drugs that are used to treat Type 2 diabetes also can contribute to unwanted side effects. But now, working with mice, researchers, led by scientists at Washington University School of...
Click here for more information.
Drugs for type 2 diabetes can contribute to weight gain, bone fractures and cardiovascular problems, but in mice, an investigational drug appears to improve insulin sensitivity without those troublesome side effects, researchers at Washington University ...