Medical School, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear NE9 6SX,
UK
1 Department of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear NE9
6SX, UK
Correspondence to: Dr Clive Kelly, Department of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Sheriff Hill, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear NE9 6SX, UK E-mail: clive.kelly{at}ghnt.nhs.uk
| SUMMARY |
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Of the 250 patients, 142 had cardiac pain (mean age 79 years, 58% male) and 108 atypical chest pain (mean age 60 years, 55% male). Of those with atypical pain, 40 were discharged without a diagnosis; in the remaining 68 the pain was thought to be musculoskeletal (25), cardiac (21), gastrointestinal (12) or respiratory (10) in origin. 41 patients were given a follow-up appointment on discharge. At one year, data were available on 103 (96%) patients. The mortality rate was 2.9% (3 patients) compared with 18.3% in those with an original cardiac event. Half of the patients with atypical pain had undergone further investigations and 14% had been readmitted. The yield of investigative procedures was generally low (20%) but at the end of the year only 27 patients remained undiagnosed.
Patients with atypical chest pain form a substantial proportion of emergency admissions. The symptoms often persist or recur. The commonest causation is musculoskeletal, but a sizeable minority remain undiagnosed even after follow-up.
| INTRODUCTION |
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The lack of a definitive diagnosis can also lead to inappropriate investigations and management6, with further anxiety and time lost from work. However, the natural history of atypical chest pain has been poorly studied and the prognosis is not well established. Even mortality figures are difficult to find because such patients are usually excluded from standard mortality data as applied to ischaemic chest pain7. In the present study we tried to assess mortality and natural history in patients with atypical chest pain from both a medical and a patient perspective.
| METHODS |
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Data were collected from the medical notes on age, gender, investigations performed, discharge diagnosis and follow-up arrangements. The discharge diagnosis was divided into the following categories: musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal, cardiac (excluding acute ischaemia), respiratory and no diagnosis.
One year after their initial admission to hospital, questionnaires were sent to all patients who had had atypical chest pain, with the exception of 3 who had died. The questions included whether the patient had received an explanation of the pain, whether it had recurred, whether more tests had been done since the original episode and whether any new treatment had been prescribed. Ethical approval was obtained both for this and for access to the medical notes which were requested for all patients.
Data were extracted from the medical notes and questionnaires and compared. From the medical notes, all investigations since discharge were recorded, together with further admissions to hospital, outpatient appointments and altered diagnoses. From the questionnaires, data relating to the patients' understanding of their diagnosis were collected, together with the frequency of symptom recurrence, investigations and treatment.
Demographic data and mortality rates at one year were recorded for the patients with objective evidence of an acute cardiac event at admission (controls). No attempt to examine their medical notes was made and questionnaires were not sent to these patients. The odds ratio test was used to evaluate the significance of any difference in mortality between the two groups8.
| RESULTS |
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At follow-up, medical notes were available for 103 of the 108 patients (3 had died as a result of heart failure or emphysema). Having ascertained that all other patients were still alive, we sent questionnaires to the remaining 105 patients and these were returned by 61. The one-year mortality among patients with atypical chest pain was 2.7% (3), compared with 18.3% (26) among the patients with an original acute ischaemic event. The odds ratio for death in this group was 7.9 (95% confidence interval 2.3-26.9) versus those with atypical pain (P < 0.001). Table 1 compares the two groups.
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Of the 100 patients with atypical chest pain still alive at follow-up and whose notes were available, 14 had been readmitted to hospital with similar or related symptoms. A total of 51 had undergone further investigation and 73 were still taking prescribed medication for their symptoms. The most frequent performed were exercise testing, myocardial perfusion scanning, gastroscopy and transthoracic echocardiography, with an average yield of positive results of only 20% (Table 2). The diagnostic category had altered for 13 patients (Table 3). The proportion of positive diagnoses had increased in each of the subgroups, with the commonest categories being musculoskeletal (27), cardiac (25), gastro-intestinal (14) and respiratory (12). Although 22 patients were still without a diagnosis, these were patients who had not been readmitted and whose questionnaires generally confirmed the absence of recurrent symptoms.
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The questionnaire responses correlated poorly with the notes with regard to patients' comprehension of their diagnosis. 30 patients correctly identified their diagnostic category, while 16 did not know what their physician considered to be the cause of their symptoms and 15 gave a diagnosis different from that recorded in their medical notes. The questionnaire did confirm the impression that symptoms are persistent or recurrent in many patients (61%) and correlated in all cases with the medical notes with regard to investigations and prescribed treatment.
| DISCUSSION |
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When myocardial infarction has been ruled out, a patient will often need more than simple reassurance that life-threatening disease has been excluded3. Other causes for ischaemic-sounding chest pain are well recognized13. Gastro-oesophageal reflux may produce symptoms similar to angina14, and pH monitoring can be useful in such patients15. Respiratory causes are also well described, including hyperventilation resulting from anxiety16. Musculoskeletal pain is perhaps less often considered, but in our study was the most frequent cause of symptoms.
The yield of individual investigations was low overall, as has been noted by others4. Coronary angiography has a low yield of positive results in both sexes17,18. Endoscopy was the most frequently positive test, allowing confirmation or recategorization of a small number of patients as having gastro-oesophageal diseaseusually reflux, with or without oesophagitis. Most investigations related to further cardiac tests and, despite a low yield of positive results of under 20%, these led to recategorization of a small number of patients as cardiac. The yield from pulmonary function testing and other respiratory tests (such as perfusion scanning for pulmonary emboli) was especially low. Overall, there was very little realignment between the diagnostic groups during follow-up, with most of the new diagnoses coming from the group of patients with no diagnosis at discharge. Despite the low yield of positive results on investigation, a negative result may be reassuring to the patient; thus, such investigations should be guided by individual clinical assessment.
Although few specific investigations for musculoskeletal disease were considered, this diagnostic category swelled during follow-up, mainly as a result of clinical assessment. A search for areas of anterior chest wall tenderness, pressure over which reproduced symptoms, was particularly helpful. Additionally, examination of the cervical and thoracic spine yielded positive findings. Physiotherapy was commonly initiated, and topical anti-inflammatory drugs were frequently prescribed.
A follow-up appointment was kept by 38% of patients, but a further 14% had been readmitted, so that over half of the patients had been reviewed during the year. Continuing symptoms had been documented in all but one of these patients. From the questionnaires, persisting symptoms were recorded by 61% of patients, although this may have been unrepresentative of the group as a whole because symptomatic patients were probably more disposed to return questionnaires. However, it is clear that over half of all patients remained symptomatic after discharge. Several of these remained undiagnosed.
Patients' perceptions of the diagnosis differed some-what from the diagnosis recorded in the medical notes: this seems to indicate failure of communication. Patients also commented that the outlook for their condition had not been discussed. Where the prognosis had been described, it was often inaccurate, with physicians underestimating both duration and frequency of recurring symptoms.
In summary, atypical chest pain is a common diagnosis in the acute medical setting. Exclusion of ischaemic heart disease is only the first step in management, and many patients will need further investigation and treatment. Three-quarters will be diagnosed within a year but many will continue to have symptoms nevertheless. The associated mortality is low, and this reassuring fact should be communicated to the patient.
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