Publication | Closed Access
Predicting the Need for Hospital Admission in Patients with Acute Bronchial Asthma
10
Citations
21
References
1996
Year
AsthmaAcute AsthmaDiagnosisHospital MedicineClinical EpidemiologyPublic HealthAcute MedicineHealth Services ResearchAcute Bronchial AsthmaVentilationAcute CareOutcomes ResearchHospital AdmissionPhysical FindingsPulmonary DiseasePatient SafetyMedicineEmergency MedicineBorg Scale
Historical data, physical findings, pulmonary function, arterial blood gases, and subjective degree of dyspnea rated on a modified Borg scale were correlated with eventual requirement of hospitalization in 83 episodes of acute asthma attacks of 70 adult patients. Among the pretreatment data, only pulse rate remained significant by a multivariate analysis to predict hospitalization. For patients who had apparently been successfully treated in the emergency room and discharged home, residual degree of subjective dyspnea was the only significant variable chosen by a linear discriminant function to predict the eventual need for hospitalization, with a sensitivity of 75% and a specificity of 78%. We concluded that careful clinical evaluation still remains the best available diagnostic tool in the care of acute asthma.
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