Christopher S. Nicholson
VCU Medical Center
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Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1997
James L. Tatum; Robert L. Jesse; Michael C. Kontos; Christopher S. Nicholson; Kristin L Schmidt; Charlotte S Roberts; Joseph P. Ornato
STUDY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a systematic evaluation and triage strategy including immediate resting myocardial perfusion imaging in patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain of possible ischemic origin. METHODS We conducted an observational study of 1,187 consecutive patients seen in the ED of an urban tertiary care hospital with the chief complaint of chest pain. Within 60 minutes of presentation, each patient was assigned to one of five levels on the basis of his or her risk of myocardial infarction (MI) or unstable angina (UA): level 1, MI; level 2, MI/UA; level 3, probable UA; level 4, possible UA; and level 5, noncardiac chest pain. In the lower risk levels (3 and 4), immediate resting myocardial perfusion imaging was used as a risk-stratification tool alone (level 4) or in combination with serial markers (level 3). RESULTS Acute MI, early revascularization indicative of acute coronary syndrome, or both were consistent with risk designations: level 1: 96% MI, 56% revascularization; level 2: 13% MI, 29% revascularization; level 3: 3% MI, 17% revascularization; level 4: .7% MI; 2.5% revascularization. Sensitivity of immediate resting myocardial perfusion imaging for MI was 100% (95% confidence interval [CI], 64% to 100%) and specificity 78% (74% to 82%). In patients with abnormal imaging findings, risk for MI (7% versus 0%, P < .001; relative risk [RR], 50; 95% CI, 2.8 to 889) and for MI or revascularization (32% vs 2%, P < .001; RR, 15.5; 95% CI, 6.4 to 36) were significantly higher than in patients with normal imaging findings. During 1-year follow-up, patients with normal imaging findings (n = 338) had an event rate of 3% (revascularization) with no MI or death (combined events: negative predictive value, 97%; 95% CI, 95% to 98%). Patients with abnormal imaging findings (n = 100) had a 42% event rate (combined events: RR, 14.2; 95% CI, 6.5 to 30; P < .001), with 11% experiencing MI and 8% cardiac death. CONCLUSION This strategy is a safe, effective method for rapid triage of chest pain patients. Rapid perfusion imaging plays a key role in the risk stratification of low-risk patients, allowing discrimination of unsuspected high risk patients who require prompt admission and possible intervention from those who are truly at low risk.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1999
Michael C. Kontos; Kristin L Schmidt; Christopher S. Nicholson; Joseph P. Ornato; Robert L. Jesse; James L. Tatum
STUDY OBJECTIVE To describe the characteristics and outcome in patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain associated with cocaine use, the majority of whom underwent early rest perfusion imaging. METHODS From January 1994 to June 1996, 218 patients had 241 ED visits for evaluation of symptoms consistent with myocardial ischemia after cocaine use. High-risk patients (N=25) were admitted directly to the CCU for exclusion of myocardial infarction (MI). Moderate- to low-risk patients (N=216) were promptly injected with technetium-99m sestamibi in the ED and underwent gated myocardial perfusion imaging 60 to 90 minutes later. Moderate-risk patients were observed in the CCU, whereas low-risk patients with negative perfusion imaging results were discharged home directly from the ED. RESULTS A diagnosis of MI was made in 6 patients, 4 of whom had ECG findings consistent with MI. Of the 216 patients who underwent perfusion imaging, 5 had positive study results, including 2 with MI. None of the 38 patients with negative results after perfusion imaging who were admitted to the CCU had a diagnosis of MI. Only 6 of the 67 patients undergoing stress perfusion imaging had reversible perfusion defects. At 30-day follow-up, there were no cardiac events in patients with negative results after rest perfusion imaging. CONCLUSION Acute MI is infrequent in patients presenting with cocaine-associated chest pain. Positive results after rest perfusion imaging are uncommon, suggesting that myocardial ischemia is infrequently the cause of cocaine-associated chest pain. Early perfusion imaging may offer an effective alternative to routine CCU admission of patients with cocaine-related cardiac symptoms.
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | 2003
Michael C. Kontos; Kristin L Schmidt; Michael J. McCue; Louis F. Rossiter; Michael Jurgensen; Christopher S. Nicholson; Robert L. Jesse; Joseph P. Ornato; James L. Tatum
BackgroundOur objective was to determine the cost-effectiveness of a comprehensive, risk-based triage system, composed of multiple critical pathways, with the use of early myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) in low-risk patients. We found previously that a chest pain evaluation system that uses MPI in low-risk patients was safe and effective, but the costeffectiveness of this approach was not studied.Methods and ResultsWe compared two groups. The Acute Cardiac Team (ACT) group (n = 874) was assigned prospectively to 1 of 4 risk levels by emergency department (ED) physicians. Level 1, 2, and 3 patients were admitted; level 4 patients were evaluated in the ED. Level 3 and 4 patients underwent ED MPI. The control group (n = 713) represented consecutive patients evaluated in the prior year according to standard care and assigned retrospectively to an ACT level based on the presenting electrocardiographic and clinical data. Record and hospital administrative data were assessed for clinical variables, outcomes, lengths of stay, and all expenses incurred within 30 days of the index visit. The baseline characteristics of the two groups were similar, including age, sex, myocardial infarction prevalence, and 30-day revascularization rates within each level or between the two groups. Mean costs per encounter were reduced for the ACT patients for each level, which was significant when all patients were compared (
Medical Update for Psychiatrists | 1997
W. Victor R. Vieweg; Linda M. Dougherty; Christopher S. Nicholson
5,030 ±
Medical Update for Psychiatrists | 1997
W. Victor; R. Vieweg; Linda M. Dougherty; Christopher S. Nicholson
7,081 vs
Medical Update for Psychiatrists | 1997
W. Victor; R. Vieweg; Christopher S. Nicholson
6,044 ±
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995
Joseph P. Ornato; Robert L. Jesse; James L. Tatum; Christopher S. Nicholson; Mary Ann Peberdy; Charlotte S. Roberts
10,432, P ± .02). Use of MPI in the low-risk patients was associated with reduced costs (level 3,
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995
Christopher S. Nicholson; Charlotte S. Roberts; James L. Tatum; Joseph P. Ornato; Robert L. Jesse
4,958 ±
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | 1995
Christopher S. Nicholson; James L. Tatum; Robert L. Jesse; Joseph P. Ornato
4,948 vs
Medical Update for Psychiatrists | 1996
W. Victor R. Vieweg; Christopher S. Nicholson
5,051 ±