Chest discomfort at night and risk of acute coronary syndrome: cross-sectional study of telephone conversations

Publication date

2020-09-05

Authors

Wouters, Loes Tc
Zwart, Dorien L MORCID 0000-0003-0098-4882
Erkelens, Daphne Carmen
Cheung, Noël S
de Groot, EstherORCID 0000-0003-0388-385XISNI 0000000390236123
Damoiseaux, Roger A.M.J.ORCID 0000-0001-8052-0302ISNI 0000000390478042
Hoes, Arno WISNI 0000000036446435
Rutten, Frans HORCID 0000-0002-5052-7332ISNI 0000000389122794

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: During telephone triage, it is difficult to assign adequate urgency to patients with chest discomfort. Considering the time of calling could be helpful. OBJECTIVE: To assess the risk of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in certain time periods and whether sex influences this risk. METHODS: Cross-sectional study of 1655 recordings of telephone conversations of patients who called the out-of-hours services primary care (OHS-PC) for chest discomfort. Call time, patient characteristics, symptoms, medical history and urgency allocation of the triage conversations were collected. The final diagnosis of each call was retrieved at the patient's general practice. Absolute numbers of patients with and without ACS were plotted and risks per hour were calculated. The risk ratio of ACS at night (0 to 9 am) was calculated by comparing to the risk at other hours and was adjusted for gender and age. RESULTS: The mean age of callers was 58.9 (standard deviation ±19.5) years, 55.5% were women and, in total, 199 (12.0%) had an ACS. The crude risk ratio for an ACS at night was 1.80 (confidence interval 1.39-2.34, P < 0.001): 2.33 (1.68-3.22, P < 0.001) for men and 1.29 (0.83-1.99, P = 0.256) for women. The adjusted risk ratio for ACS of all people at night was 1.82 (1.07-3.10, P = 0.039). CONCLUSIONS: Patients calling the OHS-PC for chest discomfort between 0 and 9 am have almost twice a higher risk of ACS than those calling other hours, a phenomenon more evident in men than in women. At night, dispatching ambulances more 'straightaway' could be considered for these patients with chest discomfort.NTR7331.

Keywords

Acute coronary syndrome, chest pain, primary health care, risk, time, triage, Family Practice, Journal Article

Citation

Wouters, L T, Zwart, D L, Erkelens, D C, Cheung, N S, de Groot, E, Damoiseaux, R A, Hoes, A W & Rutten, F H 2020, 'Chest discomfort at night and risk of acute coronary syndrome : cross-sectional study of telephone conversations', Family Practice, vol. 37, no. 4, pp. 473-478. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/cmaa005