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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Finding Acute Coronary Syndrome With Serial Troponin Testing For Rapid Assessment Of Cardiac Ischemic Symptoms (Fast-Trac): A Study Protocol, W Frank Peacock, Alan S Maisel, Christian Mueller, Stefan D Anker, Fred S Apple, Robert H Christenson, Paul Collinson, Lori B Daniels, Deborah B Diercks, Salvatore Di Somma, Gerasimos Filippatos, Gary Headden, Brian Hiestand, Judd Hollander, Juan C Kaski, Joshua M Kosowsky, John T Nagurney, Richard M Nowak, Donald Schreiber, Gary M Vilke, Marvin A Wayne, Martin Than
Finding Acute Coronary Syndrome With Serial Troponin Testing For Rapid Assessment Of Cardiac Ischemic Symptoms (Fast-Trac): A Study Protocol, W Frank Peacock, Alan S Maisel, Christian Mueller, Stefan D Anker, Fred S Apple, Robert H Christenson, Paul Collinson, Lori B Daniels, Deborah B Diercks, Salvatore Di Somma, Gerasimos Filippatos, Gary Headden, Brian Hiestand, Judd Hollander, Juan C Kaski, Joshua M Kosowsky, John T Nagurney, Richard M Nowak, Donald Schreiber, Gary M Vilke, Marvin A Wayne, Martin Than
Department of Emergency Medicine Faculty Papers
Objective: To determine the utility of a highly sensitive troponin assay when utilized in the emergency department.
Methods: The FAST-TRAC study prospectively enrolled >1,500 emergency department patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome within 6 hours of symptom onset and 2 hours of emergency department presentation. It has several unique features that are not found in the majority of studies evaluating troponin. These include a very early presenting population in whom prospective data collection of risk score parameters and the physician's clinical impression of the probability of acute coronary syndrome before any troponin data were available. Furthermore, two gold standard diagnostic …