Age and ageing
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heart failure is primarily a disease of elderly people. Current guidelines suggest all patients with suspected heart failure should undergo objective assessment, usually by echocardiography. In the UK resources are limited and not all patients have access to echocardiography. The electrocardiogram is widely used as a pre-screening investigation. Recently the natriuretic peptides have been shown to correlate well with left ventricular function, and evidence is accumulating which suggests that B-type natriuretic peptide may have a role in detecting cardiovascular disease. Elderly patients attending day hospital often have non-specific cardiovascular symptoms. B-type natriuretic peptide measurement in parallel with conventional electrocardiogram, may offer a novel method of identifying those with significant cardiac disease, which may warrant treatment. This study assessed the role of B-type natriuretic peptide and electrocardiogram in the detection of cardiac disease in patients attending Day Hospital. ⋯ B-type natriuretic peptide may be a useful marker for cardiac disease in patients attending Day Hospital. Half of the patients assessed had cardiac disease detected. Both the electrocardiogram and B-type natriuretic peptide were sensitive in the detection of left ventricular systolic dysfunction but lacked specificity. B-type natriuretic peptide was superior to the electrocardiogram in the detection of valvular disease. If used to pre-screen cardiovascular disease in Day Hospital patients, B-type natriuretic peptide and the electrocardiogram could reduce the need for echocardiography in some patients before implementing evidence-based treatments. B-type natriuretic peptide increases progressively as the number of different cardiac abnormalities increases and this may explain why B-type natriuretic peptide is of such prognostic value in older patients.
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syncope and falls are common symptoms in older adults. Dedicated facilities for these symptoms are emerging in the UK. To date, justification for resource allocation for these day case facilities is lacking. A dedicated syncope and falls day case facility for older adults was set up in Newcastle in 1991 (at the Royal Victoria Infirmary). The facility provided rapid access for assessment of appropriate patients from the community, the accident and emergency department, or emergency admissions. Activity and performance in 1999 were compared with peer inner-city teaching hospitals and with previous performance in 1990 at the Royal Victoria Infirmary to determine whether the facility had influenced emergency activity. ⋯ the striking variance in bed days in 1999 is due to lower emergency activity and shorter length of stay at the Royal Victoria Infirmary. This is attributed to the dedicated rapid access day-case facility. This has relevant resource implications for planning of future facilities and implementation of National Service Framework standards for falls and intermediate care.