Underestimated and under-recognized: the late consequences of acute coronary syndrome (GRACE UK-Belgian Study).

@article{Fox2010UnderestimatedAU,
  title={Underestimated and under-recognized: the late consequences of acute coronary syndrome (GRACE UK-Belgian Study).},
  author={Keith A. A. Fox and Kathryn F Carruthers and Donald R. Dunbar and C. Graham and Jonathan R. Manning and Herbert de Raedt and Ian Buysschaert and Diether Lambrechts and Frans Van de Werf},
  journal={European heart journal},
  year={2010},
  volume={31 22},
  pages={
          2755-64
        }
}
AIM To define the long-term outcome of patients presenting with acute coronary syndrome [ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), and non-STEMI and unstable angina acute coronary syndrome (ACS) without biomarker elevation] and to test the hypothesis that the GRACE (Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events) risk score predicts mortality and death/MI at 5 years. METHODS AND RESULTS In the GRACE long-term study, UK and Belgian centres prospectively recruited and followed ACS patients… 
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The timing of events after acute coronary syndromes was affected by ST category and influenced by GRACE risk score within each electrocardiographic category of acute coronary Syndromes.
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