ACS High Risk Feature Identification Tool
- ACS High Risk Feature Identification Tool Explanation and Clinical Context
This tool helps clinicians identify bedside clinical features that signal high risk acute coronary syndromes. It is designed for patients with suspected or confirmed acute coronary syndromes including non ST segment elevation presentations and ST segment elevation presentations. The focus is early recognition of unstable clinical states that may benefit from rapid invasive evaluation rather than simple classification of biomarker status alone.
Guideline based high risk features include refractory or recurrent ischemic chest pain despite appropriate anti ischemic treatment, hemodynamic instability with low blood pressure or signs of poor organ perfusion, cardiogenic shock, acute heart failure or pulmonary edema, serious electrical instability with sustained ventricular arrhythmias or resuscitated cardiac arrest, dynamic ST segment changes on serial electrocardiograms, a marked rise in cardiac troponin values, and suspicion of mechanical complications such as acute severe mitral regurgitation or ventricular septal defect. Presence of these findings identifies patients with higher short term risk of death and recurrent myocardial infarction and supports an immediate or early invasive strategy when not contraindicated.
The result of this tool should always be interpreted with the full clinical picture, including age, comorbid conditions, troponin pattern, electrocardiographic findings, and global risk scores such as GRACE or TIMI. Absence of listed features does not guarantee a benign course, while presence of even a single feature should prompt careful consideration for urgent transfer to a percutaneous coronary intervention capable facility and discussion with the cardiology team. Local practice protocols and available resources should guide final decisions.
Reference
Rao SV, O Donoghue ML, Ruel M, et al. 2025 ACC AHA guideline for the management of patients with acute coronary syndromes. Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2025;85 22 2135 2237.
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