Title of article :
Day-hospital treatment of acute pericarditis: A management program for outpatient therapy Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Massimo Imazio، نويسنده , , Brunella Demichelis، نويسنده , , Iris Parrini، نويسنده , , Marco Giuggia، نويسنده , , Enrico Cecchi، نويسنده , , Gianni Gaschino، نويسنده , , Daniela Demarie، نويسنده , , Aldo Ghisio، نويسنده , , Rita Trinchero، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Objectives
We sought to investigate the safety and efficacy of a protocol for acute pericarditis triage and outpatient management of low-risk cases.
Background
Acute pericarditis has generally a brief and benign course after empiric treatment by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and routine hospitalization of most patients may be unnecessary.
Methods
From January 1996 to December 2001, all consecutive cases of acute pericarditis were evaluated on a day-hospital basis. Patients without clinical poor prognostic predictors (fever >38°C, subacute onset, immunodepression, trauma, oral anticoagulant therapy, myopericarditis, severe pericardial effusion, cardiac tamponade) were considered low-risk cases and assigned to outpatient treatment with high-dose oral aspirin. Patients with poor prognostic predictors or aspirin failure were hospitalized for etiology search and treatment. A clinical and echocardiographic follow-up was performed at 48 to 72 h, 7 to 10 days, 1 month, 6 months, and 1 year.
Results
Two hundred fifty-four out of 300 (84.7%) patients were selected as low-risk cases. Outpatient treatment was efficacious in 221 out of 254 (87%) cases. Thirty-three out of 254 patients were hospitalized because of aspirin failure. Patients treated on an out-of-hospital basis had no serious complications after a mean follow-up of 38 months (no cases of cardiac tamponade). A higher frequency of recurrences and constriction was recorded in aspirin-resistant cases than in aspirin responders (60.6% vs. 10.4% for recurrences and 9.1% vs. 0.5% for constriction, respectively; all p < 0.01).
Conclusions
A protocol for acute pericarditis triage and outpatient therapy of low-risk cases is safe and efficacious and may reduce management costs.
Keywords :
CK , relative risk , non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs , NSAIDs , Creatine kinase , ECG , RR , electrocardiogram/electrocardiograph/ electrocardiographic
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)