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  1. 16 de oct. de 2020 · The Oakland Score is used in emergency and primary care settings to determine whether safe discharge and outpatient management is feasible in the case of patients presenting with lower gastrointestinal bleeding.

  2. To balance risk of thromboembolic events and ongoing bleeding in patients on AC, should use multidisciplinary approach (e.g. hematology, cardiology, neurology, GI) when deciding to discontinue or reverse the agent. Strong recommendation. Very low quality evidence. Diagnosis.

  3. To aid initial assessment of bleed severity, we recommend the use of the Oakland score as a method of predicting clinical risk. This score was developed from one of the largest prospective databases of LGIB and externally validated, but has not been further validated beyond a study environment.

  4. An Oakland Score threshold of 8 points or lower identified 3305 patients (8.7%), with a sensitivity and specificity for safe discharge of 98.4% and 16.0%, respectively.

  5. 7 de jul. de 2020 · In this prognostic study of 38 067 adult patients who were hospitalized with acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding, the Oakland Score consistently identified patients who were at low risk of experiencing adverse outcomes.

  6. Risk stratification tools such as the Oakland score ( https://www.mdcalc.com/calc/10042/oakland-score-safe-discharge-lower-gi-bleed) can be used to assist physicians in...

  7. 27 de may. de 2022 · The Oakland score was the most discriminative LGIB risk score for predicting safe discharge, major bleeding, and need for transfusion, whereas the Strate score was best for predicting need for hemostasis.

  8. The Oakland Score is a clinical calculator used to assess the risk of adverse outcomes in patients who have experienced a lower gastrointestinal (GI) bleed. It is specifically designed to identify patients who are at low risk and can be safely discharged from the hospital.

  9. 2 de mar. de 2023 · The Oakland score (score range, 035) is a validated risk-stratification tool, with a score of <8 corresponding to 95% probability of safe discharge (i.e., absence of rebleeding; no requirement for blood transfusion, procedural intervention, or readmission; and no death).

  10. 1 de jul. de 2020 · In this study, the Oakland Score consistently identified patients with acute LGIB who were at low risk of experiencing adverse outcomes and whose conditions could safely be managed without hospitalization.

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