The Canadian journal of cardiology
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Comparative Study
Changing practice patterns in the management of acute myocardial infarction complicated by cardiogenic shock: elderly compared with younger patients.
Cardiogenic shock continues to be an ominous complication of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Evidence from retrospective analyses, registries and observational studies suggests that aggressive management using emergent revascularization strategies can bring about significant improvement in survival in this setting. Several studies have identified age as an independent predictor of survival. ⋯ Use of invasive treatment strategies has increased significantly since 1989-90 in the management of patients with AMI complicated by cardiogenic shock. This increase has been associated with improved in-hospital survival in all age groups except possibly the very elderly. Patients undergoing coronary interventional procedures are significantly different in baseline clinical characteristics from patients not undergoing these procedures. These observations underscore the need for randomized trials to define the optimal treatment strategies in these patients. Efficacy of invasive treatment strategies in elderly patients aged older than 75 years-deserves special attention.