A past history of myocardial infarction and a displaced apex beat were the best clinical predictors of left ventricular systolic dysfunction among 259 patients evaluated for suspected heart failure.
Observational (n=259)
Does clinical evaluation (history and physical examination) predict left ventricular systolic dysfunction in patients with suspected heart failure?
Clinical features such as past myocardial infarction and displaced apex beat are strong predictors of LV systolic dysfunction, which may help triage echocardiography use in resource-limited settings.
We assessed the value of symptoms, past history, medications and signs in the evaluation of patients who might have heart failure secondary to left ventricular systolic dysfunction. An open-access echocardiography service was set up to help identify patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction who might benefit from treatment with an angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor. History and examination were recorded for each of these patients. The patients were divided into groups according to whether left ventricular systolic function was preserved or not and whether various clinical features were present or not. Of 259 consecutive patients studied, 41 had impairment of left ventricular systolic function as assessed by echocardiography. Past history of myocardial infarction and displaced apex beat were the best single predictors of left ventricular systolic dysfunction as assessed by echocardiography. The combination of past history of myocardial infarction and displaced apex had the best positive predictive value of all. Patients with such clinical features or combinations of clinical features may not need echocardiography, and where access to this resource is limited, it could be reserved for patients without such diagnostic features.
Andrew Davie (Thu,) conducted a observational in Heart failure (n=259). Clinical features (history and examination) was evaluated on Left ventricular systolic dysfunction assessed by echocardiography. A past history of myocardial infarction and a displaced apex beat were the best clinical predictors of left ventricular systolic dysfunction among 259 patients evaluated for suspected heart failure.