BMJ  2006;332 (4 February), doi:10.1136/bmj.332.7536.0-c

Scoring prognosis in stable angina

In stable angina, six clinical factors are independently most predictive of adverse outcome: comorbidity, diabetes, shorter symptom duration, increasing symptom severity, ventricular dysfunction, and resting electrocardiography changes. Daly and colleagues (p 262) carried out a cohort study of more than 3000 patients from 156 European outpatient cardiology clinics who had a new clinical diagnosis of stable angina. Using those six simple, readily available factors, they constructed a score to estimate the probability of death or myocardial infarction within one year after a patient presents with stable angina.

Figure 1
Credit: CONOR CAFFREY/SPL


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Relevant Article

Predicting prognosis in stable angina—results from the Euro heart survey of stable angina: prospective observational study
Caroline A Daly, Bianca De Stavola, Jose L Lopez Sendon, Luigi Tavazzi, Eric Boersma, Felicity Clemens, Nicholas Danchin, Francois Delahaye, Anselm Gitt, Desmond Julian, David Mulcahy, Witold Ruzyllo, Kristian Thygesen, Freek Verheugt, Kim M Fox on behalf of the Euro Heart Survey Investigators
BMJ 2006 332: 262-267. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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