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San Francisco Syncope Rule - MDCalc The San Francisco Syncope Rule predicts risk for serious outcomes at 7 days in patients presenting with syncope or near-syncope
MDCalc Wars: Sorting Out Syncope – Which Rule Should You Trust? On MDCalc, the San Francisco Syncope Rule flagged him as not low-risk, and the Canadian Syncope Risk Score and your clinical gestalt pushed him into the intermediate category Instead of discharge papers, he earned a telemetry observation stay—because sometimes it’s not just the “boring speeches!”
San Francisco Syncope Rule - EB Medicine After following the patients for 30 days, the San Francisco Syncope Rule was able to predict serious outcomes in all but 1 patient (98% sensitivity) The rule had higher specificity than physician judgment (56% specificity), with an estimated decrease in overall admission rate by 7%, if applied
San Francisco Syncope Rule (SFSR) - medcalcu. com The San Francisco Syncope Rule is a validated, simple, and highly sensitive clinical tool that uses five key variables (CHF, SOB, Low Hct, Low SBP, Abnormal ECG) to identify syncope patients at high risk for serious short-term outcomes
EBQ:San Francisco Syncope Rule - WikEM Can the San Francisco Syncope Rule be used in clinical practice to risk stratify patients presenting with syncope? The San Francisco Syncope Rule demonstrated to be highly sensitive (98% sensitivity, 95% CI 89-100%) but not very specific (56%, 95% CI 52-60%) for predicting serious outcomes
What are the San Francisco syncope rules for managing patients with . . . The San Francisco Syncope Rule (SFSR) is a validated clinical decision tool that identifies patients at high risk for serious outcomes within 7 days of syncope presentation, using five key risk factors: abnormal ECG, congestive heart failure, shortness of breath, hematocrit <30%, and systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg
San Francisco Syncope Rule (SFSR) - mdicu. com Any of the above conditions indicate a high risk of serious adverse outcomes (including death, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, pulmonary embolism, stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, severe bleeding, or any condition requiring emergency room visit and hospitalization) in syncope patients
San Francisco syncope rule to predict short-term serious outcomes: a . . . The probability of a serious outcome given a negative score with the San Francisco Syncope Rule was 5% or lower, and the probability was 2% or lower when the rule was applied only to patients for whom no cause of syncope was identified after initial evaluation in the emergency department
UMEM Educational Pearls - University of Maryland School of Medicine . . . Syncope is defined as a transient loss of consciousness and accounts for an estimated 1% to 3% of emergency department (ED) visits While syncope typically is of benign origin, it occasionally signals significant mortality and morbidity, which can make determining the disposition of syncope patients a challenge