Author:
Takei Makoto,Harada Kazumasa,Shiraishi Yasuyuki,Matsuda Junya,Iwasaki Yoichi,Yamamoto Yoshiya,Matsushita Kenichi,Miyazaki Tetsuro,Miyamoto Takamichi,Iida Kiyosi,Tanimoto Shuzo,Nagatomo Yuji,Hosoda Toru,Kohsaka Shun,Yamamoto Takeshi,Nagao Ken,Takayama Morimasa
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Many patients with emergent heart failure (HF) readmission have a delay between symptom onset and hospitalization. The present study aimed to characterize the interval between symptom onset and hospitalization in patients being readmitted for HF and to compare the clinical phenotypes of patients with delay before emergent readmission with those who presented to the hospital earlier.
Methods
Data for a total of 2073 consecutive patients was collected from the Tokyo CCU Network database; the patients were divided into delayed (those who sought medical help > 2 days after symptom onset; n = 271) and early groups (remaining patients; n = 1802), and their clinical characteristics and mode of presentation were compared.
Results
Age, sex, and laboratory findings including brain natriuretic peptide and serum creatinine levels were not significantly different between the two groups. Patients in the delayed group had greater chronic fluid retention and symptoms not associated with respiratory failure, whereas those in the early group were more likely to have acute respiratory distress, faster heart and respiration rates, and higher systolic blood pressure.
Conclusions
More than one in ten patients with HF readmission delay seeking treatment > 2 days after symptom onset. Patients who delayed seeking treatment showed the phenotype of chronic fluid retention, whereas those who presented to the hospital earlier had the phenotype of acute respiratory failure.
Funder
Tokyo Metropolitan Government
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Cited by
4 articles.
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