Objective: The purpose of this article is to determine the frequency of adverse cardiac events during the year following a negative cardiac CT angiogram in a population of patients presenting to the emergency department with low-to-moderate risk chest pain.
Subjects And Methods: Eighty-one consecutive patients who had standard of care evaluation for low-to-moderate risk chest pain in the emergency department were enrolled and consented to have a cardiac CT angiogram added to their workup and to have follow-up for 1 year. Eleven patients were excluded, six because their cardiac CT examinations were unsuccessful, four because of a positive cardiac CT angiogram result, and one was lost to follow-up.
Objective: The current standard-of-care workup of low-risk patients with chest pain in an emergency department takes 12-36 hours and is expensive. We hypothesized that negative 64-MDCT coronary angiography early in the workup of such patients may enable a shorter length of stay and reduce charges.
Materials And Methods: The standard-of-care evaluation consisted of serial cardiac enzyme tests, ECGs, and stress testing.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to compare the patient radiation dose and coronary artery image quality of long-z-axis whole-chest 64-MDCT performed with retrospective ECG gating with those of CT performed with prospective ECG triggering in the evaluation of emergency department patients with nonspecific chest pain.
Subjects And Methods: Consecutively registered emergency department patients with nonspecific low-to-moderate-risk chest pain underwent whole-chest CT with retrospective gating (n = 41) or prospective triggering (n = 31). Effective patient radiation doses were estimated and compared by use of unpaired Student's t tests.