Could doctors use machine learning to detect heart attacks faster?
But Dr Louise Cullen, an emergency physician at the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital and one of the study's authors, said there were arbitrary cut-offs for troponin levels considered to be an indicator of a heart attack. "We see people come to hospital with heart damage and high levels of troponin, some of them are having a heart attack and some have other causes," Dr Cullen said. "There's an arbitrary cut-off point for indicating a heart attack based on a so-called normal population. "The problem is we know the older you get and whether you're male or female makes a difference on what that value should be.
Sep-14-2019, 23:56:20 GMT