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Medical Care:
August 1996 - Volume 34 - Issue 8 - pp 754-759
Original Article

Changes in Health After Elective Percutaneous Coronary Revascularization: A Comparison of Generic and Specific Measures

KRUMHOLZ, HARLAN M. MD; MCHORNEY, COLLEEN A. PHD; CLARK, LESLIE RN; LEVESQUE, MICHELLE RN; BAIM, DONALD S. MD; GOLDMAN, LEE MD

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study determines changes in health-related quality of life after elective percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and compares generic and specific measures.

METHODS: Changes in health-related quality of life were measured in consecutive, symptomatic patients undergoing elective percutaneous coronary revascularization using the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36), the Specific Activity Scale (SAS), and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society Classification (CCSC). The patients were interviewed as outpatients before admission and at least 6 months later.

RESULTS: There were significant changes in the following SF-36 measures: physical functioning (postscore minus prescore = 19.1 ± 24.1), role limitations due to physical-health problems (40.4 ± 47.2), bodily pain (19.9 ± 29.3), vitality (12.9 ± 25.1), social functioning (20.0 ± 33.1), role limitations due to emotional-health problems (26.7 ± 49.0), and general mental health (7.1 ± 21.2). General health perceptions did not change significantly. Internal-consistency reliability coefficients for these measures ranged from 0.73 to 0.91. There also was significant improvement in the CCSC class, but the SAS class did not change significantly. Overall, the SF-36 role-physical scale was the most responsive to changes after elective percutaneous coronary revascularization, followed by the CCSC and the SF-36 physical functioning scale.

CONCLUSIONS: Although this study cannot determine the causal role of elective percutaneous coronary revascularization in these changes, it provides support for the usefulness of these measures in future evaluations of this intervention.

© Lippincott-Raven Publishers

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