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      Implementation of a Clinical Pathway for Chest Pain in a Pediatric Emergency Department :

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          Chest pain and syncope in children: a practical approach to the diagnosis of cardiac disease.

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            Cardiac disease in pediatric patients presenting to a pediatric ED with chest pain.

            Chest pain is a frequent chief complaint among the pediatric population. To date, limited data exist on the full spectrum of emergent cardiac disease among such patients; and existing data have been limited to relatively small cohorts.
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              Management of pediatric chest pain using a standardized assessment and management plan.

              Chest pain is a common reason for referral to pediatric cardiologists and often leads to an extensive cardiac evaluation. The objective of this study is to describe current management practices in the assessment of pediatric chest pain and to determine whether a standardized care approach could reduce unnecessary testing. We reviewed all patients, aged 7 to 21 years, presenting to our outpatient pediatric cardiology division in 2009 for evaluation of chest pain. Demographics, clinical characteristics, patient outcomes, and resource use were analyzed. Testing included electrocardiography (ECG) in all 406 patients, echocardiography in 175 (43%), exercise stress testing in 114 (28%), event monitoring in 40 (10%), and Holter monitoring in 30 (7%). A total of 44 (11%) patients had a clinically significant medical or family history, an abnormal cardiac examination, and/or an abnormal ECG. Exertional chest pain was present in 150 (37%) patients. In the entire cohort, a cardiac etiology for chest pain was found in only 5 of 406 (1.2%) patients. Two patients had pericarditits, and 3 had arrhythmias. We developed an algorithm using pertinent history, physical examination, and ECG findings to suggest when additional testing is indicated. Applying the algorithm to this cohort could lead to an ∼20% reduction in echocardiogram and outpatient rhythm monitor use and elimination of exercise stress testing while still capturing all cardiac diagnoses. Evaluation of pediatric chest pain is often extensive and rarely yields a cardiac etiology. Practice variation and unnecessary resource use remain concerns. Targeted testing can reduce resource use and lead to more cost-effective care.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Pediatric Emergency Care
                Pediatric Emergency Care
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0749-5161
                2018
                November 2018
                : 34
                : 11
                : 778-782
                Article
                10.1097/PEC.0000000000000861
                5359077
                27649041
                ab333c3d-93db-4ef6-84c2-b3505ae52760
                © 2018
                History

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