BACKGROUND: Atherosclerotic heart disease is still a leading cause of mortality despite improvements in cardiovascular care. Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is the recommended reperfusion therapy in acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), and the international guideline is to achieve a door-to-balloon (D2B) time within 90 minutes of patient arrival to an emergency department (ED). OBJECTIVES: Describe interventions, data for the study period, challenges in ensuring 24/7 patient access to PCI and quality indicators. DESIGN: Retrospective observational study. SETTING: Tertiary care institution in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We included all acute coronary syndrome patients from 2010-2018 who presented or were transferred to our ED from nearby non-PCI capable hospitals, and for whom a ‘code heart’ was activated. Electronic medical records and the patient care report from the ambulance services were accessed for data collection. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: D2B time, readmission and mortality rate. SAMPLE SIZE AND CHARACTERISTICS: 354 patients, mean age (standard deviation) 55.6 (12.6) years, males 84.5% (n=299). RESULTS: STEMI patients constituted 94% (n=334) of the study group; the others had non-STEMI or unstable angina. Hypertension (51%) was the most prevalent risk factor. Coronary artery stenting was the most frequent intervention (77.4%) followed by medical therapy (14.7%). The most common culprit artery was the left anterior descending (52.5%) followed by the right coronary artery (26.0%). A D2B time of within 90 minutes was achieved in over 85% of the patients in four of the years in the 278 patients who underwent PCI. The median D2B time (interquar-tile range) over 2010-2018 was 79 (31) minutes. CONCLUSION: Meeting the international benchmark of D2B time within 90 minutes for STEMI patients is achievable when the main stakeholders collaborate in patient-centric care. Our patient demographics represent regional trends. LIMITATIONS: Patient acceptance to our institution is based upon eligibility criteria. Transfer of ‘code heart’ patients from other institutions was carried out by our ambulance team. The credentials and experience of cardiologists, emergency physicians, and ambulance services are not standardized across the country. Therefore, the results may not be generalizable to other institutions. CONFLICT OF INTEREST: None.
The ambulance transferred patients have a set of physiological parameters i.e., temperature, heart rate, blood pressure (systolic & diastolic), respiratory rate and oxygen saturations (vitals), done on route to the emergency department (ED). The ED triage nurse has to repeat them on arrival, which can delay the initiation of clinical encounter with the physician. It can also impact on the ambulance turnaround time.We did a retrospective comparative analysis of the two sets of vitals recorded by paramedics and ED triage nurses for 332 patients over a period of 5 months.There was no significant median difference between the two set of vitals. The mean (SD) difference and P <0.05 were not statistically significant for 4 out the six parameters compared.The traige and door to doctor time can be significantly decreased, if duplication can be avoided at triage for ambulance transferred patients.
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