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      Inequidades en la atención al dolor torácico de origen isquémico en Urgencias desde una perspectiva de género Translated title: Inequality in the management of ischemic chest pain in the emergency department from a gender perspective

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          Abstract

          RESUMEN Fundamentos: El sexo es determinante en las diferencias con que hombres y mujeres son atendidos en Urgencias. El objetivo de este estudio fue analizar el perfil clínico de los pacientes atendidos en Urgencias por dolor torácico isquémico, y la presencia de inequidades según sexo en el diagnóstico y tratamiento. Métodos: Se realizó un estudio observacional descriptivo de los pacientes que acudieron a Urgencias del Hospital Universitario Miguel Servet (Zaragoza) por dolor torácico isquémico en 2017. Se recogieron variables sociodemográficas y clínicas de tratamiento y evolución mediante la historia clínica. Se realizó análisis bivariante y multivariante mediante el paquete estadístico SPSS. Resultados: Se registraron 351 casos (235 hombres, 116 mujeres). Las mujeres fueron mayores que los hombres (edad mediana de 75,5 años frente a 71,4 años en hombres, p=0,003), acudieron más durante el verano (p=0,021), tomaron con mayor frecuencia benzodiacepinas (p=0,001), antidepresivos (p<0,001) y diuréticos (p=0,039), y presentaron con mayor proporción hipertensión arterial (p=0,001). Los hombres acudieron más durante el otoño (p=0,008) y presentaron más antecedentes de cardiopatía isquémica (p=0,003) e intervención coronaria percutánea (p<0,001). El tiempo de realización del electrocardiograma fue mayor en mujeres (p<0,001), y estas fueron diagnosticadas con mayor frecuencia de dolor torácico atípico (p=0,003), a diferencia de los hombres, más diagnosticados de síndrome coronario agudo (p=0,028) y sometidos a tratamiento invasor (p<0,001). Conclusiones: Existen diferencias según el sexo en los antecedentes, demora en la realización del electrocardiograma y uso de tratamiento invasor. Su consideración desde Urgencias, sin influencia de juicios de valor y con la determinación de valores desagregados por sexo, puede mejorar la atención y evolución de estos pacientes.

          Translated abstract

          ABSTRACT Background: Sex is a determining factor in the differences with which men and women are treated in the emergency room. The objective was to analyze the profile in patients with chest paint attended in emergency department, and the gender inequalities in the diagnosis and treatment. Methods: Descriptive observational study of patients, who attended to the Miguel Servet University Hospital emergency department, with ischemic chest pain during 2017. Sociodemographic and clinical variables of treatment and evolution were analyzed. Bivariate and multivariate analysis was performed through the statistical program SPSS. Results: 351 cases were registered (235 men and 116 women). The women were older (median age 75.5 years, against, 71.4 years in men, p=0.003), went to the hospital during summer time (p=0.021) and took most often of benzodiazepines (p=0.001), antidepressants (p<0.001) and diuretics drugs (p=0.039). The women had greater proportion of arterial hypertension (p=0.001). The men came more to the emergency department during autumn period (p=0.008), and had more history of ischemic heart disease (p=0.003) and percutaneous coronary intervention (p<0.001). The time of completion of the first electrocardiogram was greater in women (p<0.001), and were diagnosed with a higher frequency of atypical chest pain (p=0.003), unlike men, more diagnosed of acute coronary syndrome (p=0.028) and subjected to invasive treatment (p <0.001). Conclusions: There are differences according to sex in the antecedents, delay in performing the first electrocardiogram and use of invasive treatment. Its consideration from the emergency department, without influence of value judgments and with the determination of values disaggregated by sex, can improve the attention and evolution of these patients.

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          Prevalence of major cardiovascular risk factors and cardiovascular diseases among Hispanic/Latino individuals of diverse backgrounds in the United States.

          Major cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are leading causes of mortality among US Hispanic and Latino individuals. Comprehensive data are limited regarding the prevalence of CVD risk factors in this population and relations of these traits to socioeconomic status (SES) and acculturation. To describe prevalence of major CVD risk factors and CVD (coronary heart disease [CHD] and stroke) among US Hispanic/Latino individuals of different backgrounds, examine relationships of SES and acculturation with CVD risk profiles and CVD, and assess cross-sectional associations of CVD risk factors with CVD. Multicenter, prospective, population-based Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos including individuals of Cuban (n = 2201), Dominican (n = 1400), Mexican (n = 6232), Puerto Rican (n = 2590), Central American (n = 1634), and South American backgrounds (n = 1022) aged 18 to 74 years. Analyses involved 15,079 participants with complete data enrolled between March 2008 and June 2011. Adverse CVD risk factors defined using national guidelines for hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, obesity, diabetes, and smoking. Prevalence of CHD and stroke were ascertained from self-reported data. Age-standardized prevalence of CVD risk factors varied by Hispanic/Latino background; obesity and current smoking rates were highest among Puerto Rican participants (for men, 40.9% and 34.7%; for women, 51.4% and 31.7%, respectively); hypercholesterolemia prevalence was highest among Central American men (54.9%) and Puerto Rican women (41.0%). Large proportions of participants (80% of men, 71% of women) had at least 1 risk factor. Age- and sex-adjusted prevalence of 3 or more risk factors was highest in Puerto Rican participants (25.0%) and significantly higher (P < .001) among participants with less education (16.1%), those who were US-born (18.5%), those who had lived in the United States 10 years or longer (15.7%), and those who preferred English (17.9%). Overall, self-reported CHD and stroke prevalence were low (4.2% and 2.0% in men; 2.4% and 1.2% in women, respectively). In multivariate-adjusted models, hypertension and smoking were directly associated with CHD in both sexes as were hypercholesterolemia and obesity in women and diabetes in men (odds ratios [ORs], 1.5-2.2). For stroke, associations were positive with hypertension in both sexes, diabetes in men, and smoking in women (ORs, 1.7-2.6). Among US Hispanic/Latino adults of diverse backgrounds, a sizeable proportion of men and women had adverse major risk factors; prevalence of adverse CVD risk profiles was higher among participants with Puerto Rican background, lower SES, and higher levels of acculturation.
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            Determination of 19 cardiac troponin I and T assay 99th percentile values from a common presumably healthy population.

            Between-assay comparability of 99th percentiles for cardiac troponin concentrations has not been assessed systematically in a single population for a large number of assays. We determined 99th percentiles for 19 cardiac troponin assays in heparin plasma samples from a population of 272 and 252 presumably healthy males and females, respectively. The assays evaluated included 1 cardiac troponin T (cTnT) assay from Roche and 18 cTnI assays from Abbott, Alere, Beckman, bioMerieux, Instrumentation Laboratory, Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, Singulex, Siemens, and Roche. Five of these assays were categorized as high-sensitivity, 9 as sensitive-contemporary, and 5 as point-of-care (POC) assays. For high-sensitivity cTnI (hs-cTnI) assays 99th percentiles varied from 23 to 58 ng/L. At least 80% of individuals had measurable hs-cTnI, whereas only 25% had measurable high-sensitivity cTnT. All high-sensitivity cardic troponin assays had 99th percentiles that were 1.2-2.4-fold higher in males than females. For the 9 sensitive-contemporary cTnI assays, 99th percentiles varied from 12 to 392 ng/L, and only the Beckman assay gave measurable concentrations in a substantial portion of the population (35% vs ≤6% for the others). Seven of these 9 assays had 1.3-5.0-fold higher 99th percentiles for males than females. For 5 cTnI POC assays, 99th percentiles varied from <10 to 40 ng/L. The Instrumentation Laboratory assay gave measurable results in 27.8% of study participants vs ≤6% for the others. Correlations were generally poor among assays. Among cardiac troponin assays 99th percentile concentrations appear to differ. High-sensitivity assays provide measurable cardiac troponin results in a substantially greater fraction of presumably healthy individuals. © 2012 American Association for Clinical Chemistry
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              Seasonal affective disorder. A description of the syndrome and preliminary findings with light therapy.

              Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a syndrome characterized by recurrent depressions that occur annually at the same time each year. We describe 29 patients with SAD; most of them had a bipolar affective disorder, especially bipolar II, and their depressions were generally characterized by hypersomnia, overeating, and carbohydrate craving and seemed to respond to changes in climate and latitude. Sleep recordings in nine depressed patients confirmed the presence of hypersomnia and showed increased sleep latency and reduced slow-wave (delta) sleep. Preliminary studies in 11 patients suggest that extending the photoperiod with bright artificial light has an antidepressant effect.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                resp
                Revista Española de Salud Pública
                Rev. Esp. Salud Publica
                Ministerio de Sanidad, Consumo y Bienestar social (Madrid, Madrid, Spain )
                1135-5727
                2173-9110
                2019
                : 93
                : e201912112
                Affiliations
                [1] Zaragoza orgnameHospital Universitario Miguel Servet orgdiv1Servicio de Urgencias España
                [2] Zaragoza Aragón orgnameUniversidad de Zaragoza orgdiv1Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud Spain
                [3] Zaragoza orgnameHospital Universitario Materno-Infantil Miguel Servet orgdiv1Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos Pediátricos España
                Article
                S1135-57272019000100223 S1135-5727(19)09300000223
                4b2e2d55-c70b-4003-b32d-cd9ce65b3b7a

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 International License.

                History
                : 10 July 2019
                : 04 November 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 34, Pages: 0
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                SciELO Public Health

                Categories
                Originales Breves

                Gender,Chest pain,Myocardial infarction,Emergency service,Acute coronary syndrome,Sexo,Dolor torácico,Infarto de miocardio,Urgencias,Síndrome coronario agudo

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