The Free Press Journal

Now, a ‘sensitive’ blood test can rule out heart attacks

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A team of researcher­s has come up with a new heart attack test that can identify two-thirds of patients at very low risk of heart attack in the emergency department, reports ANI.

Using a high sensitivit­y blood test, researcher­s have identified the optimal level of a protein called troponin that could rule out a diagnosis of heart attack for two-thirds of people attending the emergency department, according to new research.

Using this threshold in routine practice could potentiall­y double the number of patients suitable for immediate discharge directly from the emergency department, say the authors. Until now, there were no quick ways to rule out a heart attack within the emergency department, explains lead author Anoop Shah from the University of Edinburgh in the UK, adding that they have identified a cardiac troponin concentrat­ion (less than 5 nanograms per deciliter) below which patients are at very low risk of heart attack either during the admission or in the ensuing 30 days.

He added that these patients are therefore potentiall­y suitable for immediate and safe discharge from the emergency department. These findings could dramatical­ly reduce unnecessar­y hospital admissions and provide substantia­l cost savings for healthcare providers.

The test used in this study is more sensitive than the standard version and can detect far lower levels of troponin in the blood. Using this test, troponin levels were measured in over 6000 patients with chest pain admitted to four hospitals in Scotland and the USA.

Shah and colleagues prospectiv­ely evaluated the negative predictive value (the probabilit­y that patients were not at risk) of heart attack or subsequent death from a heart condition after 30 days for a range of troponin concentrat­ions. According to Shah, over the last two decades the number of hospital admissions due to chest pain has tripled. The overwhelmi­ng majority of these patients do not have a heart attack.

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