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  2. MDCalc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MDCalc

    MDCalc is a free online medical reference for healthcare professionals that provides point-of-care clinical decision-support tools, including medical calculators, scoring systems, and algorithms. [1]

  3. Early warning system (medical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_warning_system_(medical)

    Compared to the National Early Warning Score from the UK, Q-ADDS had a higher rate of prediction of deterioration (46.5% Q-ADDS vs 40.8% NEWS) but a higher rate of false-positives (3.2:1 Q-ADDS vs 2.4:1 NEWS). [12] The efficacy of EWSs in improving patient outcomes is also reliant on a number of personal and structural factors.

  4. HeartScore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HeartScore

    HeartScore is the interactive version of SCORE - Systematic COronary Risk Evaluation [1] - a cardiovascular disease risk assessment system initiated by the European Society of Cardiology, using data from 12 European cohort studies (N=205,178) covering a wide geographic spread of countries at different levels of cardiovascular risks.

  5. File:National Early Warning Score chart, Royal College of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:National_Early...

    English: NEWS2 chart, a widely used Early Warning Score chart published by the Royal College of Physicians. Reproduced from: Royal College of Physicians. National Early Warning Score (NEWS) 2: Standardising the assessment of acute-illness severity in the NHS. Updated report of a working party. London: RCP, 2017. URL of relevant page.

  6. Acute coronary syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_coronary_syndrome

    The TIMI risk score can identify high risk patients in ST-elevation and non-ST segment elevation MI ACS [30] [31] and has been independently validated. [32] [33] Based on a global registry of 102,341 patients, the GRACE risk scoreestimates in-hospital, 6 months, 1 year, and 3-year mortality risk after a heart attack. [34]

  7. Revised Cardiac Risk Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revised_Cardiac_Risk_Index

    The Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) is a tool used to estimate a patient's risk of perioperative cardiac complications. The RCRI and similar clinical prediction tools are derived by looking for an association between preoperative variables (e.g., patient's age, type of surgery, comorbid diagnoses, or laboratory data) and the risk for cardiac complications in a cohort of surgical patients ...

  8. Coronary CT calcium scan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronary_CT_calcium_scan

    The tomographic slices of the heart are 3 millimeters thick and average about 50–60 slices from the coronary artery ostia to the inferior wall of the heart. The calcium score of every calcification in each coronary artery for all of the tomographic slices is then summed up to give the total coronary artery calcium score (CAC score). [9]

  9. Vital signs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vital_signs

    A child aged 1–⁠3 years old can have a heart rate of 80–⁠130 bpm, a child aged 3–⁠5 years old a heart rate of 80–⁠120 bpm, an older child (age of 6–10) a heart rate of 70–⁠110 bpm, and an adolescent (age 11–⁠14) a heart rate of 60–105 bpm. [12] An adult (age 15+) can have a heart rate of 60–100 bpm. [12]