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- Matthew Davis, Michael Lewell, Shelley McLeod, and Adam Dukelow.
- From the Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, The University of Western Ontario (MD, ML, SM, AD) , London, Ontario , Canada ; and the Southwest Ontario Regional Base Hospital Program (MD, ML, AD) , London, Ontario , Canada .
- Prehosp Emerg Care. 2014 Jan 1;18(1):9-14.
ObjectiveRetrospective research has shown that 19% of 12-lead prehospital electrocardiograms (prehospital ECGs) had clinically significant abnormalities that were not captured on the initial emergency department (ED) ECG and had the potential to change medical management. The purpose of this study was to prospectively determine how many prehospital ECGs had clinically significant abnormalities not present on the initial ED ECG and determine how many prehospital ECGs changed physician management.MethodsWe conducted a 3-month, prospective cohort study of patients who had a 12-lead prehospital ECG completed by EMS prior to arriving at one of two tertiary care EDs. STEMI bypass patients were excluded. Physicians reviewed the prehospital ECG to determine whether there were any clinically significant abnormalities present on the prehospital ECG not captured on the initial ED ECG. Physicians recorded if and how the prehospital ECG changed their management.ResultsA total of 281 patients were enrolled. Thirty-five (12.5%; 95% CI: 9.1%, 16.8%) prehospital ECGs showed changes that were not captured on the initial ED ECG (11 ST depression, 5 T-wave inversion [TWI], 2 ST depression and TWI, 12 arrhythmia, 2 arrhythmia with ST depression, 2 ST elevation, 1 unknown). Fifty-two (18.5%; 95% CI: 14.4%, 23.5%) prehospital ECGs influenced physician management. There were 30 (10.7%) instances where physicians were willing to refer the patient to an inpatient service based on information captured on the prehospital ECG, regardless if the initial ED ECG was normal.ConclusionsPrehospital ECGs show clinically significant abnormalities that are not always captured on the initial ED ECG. Prehospital ECGs have the potential to change the management of patients in the ED.
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