Beth Goldstein-Wayne
University of Cincinnati
4 Papers
189 Citations
Beth Goldstein-Wayne is an academic researcher from University of Cincinnati. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chest pain & Emergency department. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications. Previous affiliations of Beth Goldstein-Wayne include University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center.
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Papers
Clinical characteristics and natural history of patients with acute myocardial infarction sent home from the emergency room.
Thomas H. Lee,Gregory W. Rouan,M C Weisberg,D A Brand,Denise Acampora,Carol Stasiulewicz,Jay Walshon,George Terranova,Louis D. Gottlieb,Beth Goldstein-Wayne,David Copen,Karen Daley,Allan A. Brandt,John Mellors,Rita Jakubowski,E. Francis Cook,Lee Goldman +16 more
TL;DR: Patients in whom AMI was missed were significantly younger, had less typical symptoms and were less likely to to have had prior AMI or angina or to have electrocardiographic evidence of ischemia or infarction not known to be old.
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A chest pain clinic to improve the follow-up of patients released from an urban university teaching hospital emergency department
TL;DR: The Chest Pain Clinic, which was originally instituted as part of a research protocol, has now become part of the routine spectrum of care provided at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
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Use of cardiac enzymes identifies patients with acute myocardial infarction otherwise unrecognized in the emergency department
TL;DR: Although cardiac enzymes cannot be used in isolation to make admission decisions, selective use of CK-MB for final screening of patients otherwise scheduled for ED release may enhance the initial admission of patients with MI at risk for unintentional release.
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Limitations of chest pain follow-up from an urban teaching hospital emergency department.
TL;DR: Analysis of follow-up of 318 patients 30 or more years of age with nontraumatic chest pain released from the emergency department of a large urban teaching hospital suggests that specific measures to enhance follow- up must be instituted at urban teaching hospitals if chest pain patients are to be closely followed after ED release.
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