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Stress Test versus Coronary CT Before Discharge Pathway Tool

  • Age in years
  • Known obstructive coronary artery disease history of myocardial infarction percutaneous coronary intervention or bypass surgery
  • Patient can perform adequate exercise workload
  • Resting electrocardiogram is interpretable for ischemia for example no left bundle branch block paced rhythm or extensive baseline ST segment abnormality
  • Renal function is preserved estimated glomerular filtration rate at least sixty milliliter per minute per one point seven three square meter
  • History of moderate or severe reaction to iodinated contrast
  • Prior coronary stent or bypass graft present
  • Body mass index at least forty kilogram per square meter
  • On site coronary computed tomography angiography capability with experienced interpretation is available before discharge
  • Stress Test versus Coronary Computed Tomography Before Discharge Pathway Tool Explanation and Clinical Context
    In contemporary management of acute coronary syndromes the two thousand twenty five guideline from the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association notes that selected patients can safely undergo either noninvasive stress testing or coronary computed tomography angiography before hospital discharge when high risk features have been excluded and troponin guided pathways show no dynamic injury. In these patients noninvasive testing refines residual risk identifies occult obstructive coronary artery disease and guides the need for invasive coronary angiography before discharge.

    Coronary computed tomography angiography provides a rapid anatomic assessment of the coronary tree and is especially useful in younger patients without known coronary artery disease who have preserved renal function no important iodinated contrast allergy and body habitus that allows high quality imaging. Randomized and observational studies in emergency and observation unit settings have shown that coronary computed tomography angiography can safely shorten length of stay and increase the rate of safe early discharge in low and intermediate risk patients with possible acute coronary syndromes when performed with appropriate radiation dose reduction and with experienced readers.

    Functional stress testing remains central for many patients. Exercise treadmill testing requires adequate exercise capacity and an electrocardiogram that is interpretable for ischemia. When either condition is not met stress imaging with echocardiography nuclear perfusion imaging or cardiovascular magnetic resonance is preferred. In patients with known obstructive coronary artery disease prior stent or bypass grafts advanced age heavy calcification or limited image quality for coronary computed tomography angiography functional testing often provides more clinically useful information because it quantifies ischemic burden integrates microvascular and endothelial factors and links directly to established thresholds for invasive angiography and revascularization.

    The pathway encoded in this calculator therefore weighs clinical factors that favor coronary computed tomography angiography such as absence of known disease preserved renal function no significant contrast reaction and good imaging conditions against factors that favor stress imaging such as established coronary disease prior revascularization limited ability to perform high quality computed tomography and institutional reliance on well developed stress laboratories. The recommendation output is not a rigid mandate but a structured suggestion that aligns with the emphasis in the two thousand twenty five acute coronary syndrome guideline on individualized risk stratification use of noninvasive testing before discharge in appropriate patients and timely referral for invasive coronary angiography in those with high risk findings or recurrent ischemic symptoms.

    Reference
    Rao S and colleagues Two thousand twenty five American College of Cardiology American Heart Association Guideline for the management of patients with acute coronary syndromes Circulation two thousand twenty five volume one hundred fifty one issue twenty five pages e one thousand ninety eight and following.
    Gulati M and colleagues Two thousand twenty one guideline for the evaluation and diagnosis of chest pain a report of the American College of Cardiology American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines Journal of the American College of Cardiology two thousand twenty one volume seventy eight pages e one hundred eighty seven and following.
    Litt H and coauthors Computed tomography angiography for safe discharge of patients with possible acute coronary syndromes New England Journal of Medicine two thousand twelve volume three hundred sixty six pages one thousand three hundred ninety three to one thousand four hundred three.

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