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Table 5 Relationship between the stress hyperglycaemia ratio and incidence of in-hospital cardiac arrest in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, patients with non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, and patients with unstable angina pectoris

From: Relationship between stress hyperglycaemic ratio and incidence of in-hospital cardiac arrest in patients with acute coronary syndrome: a retrospective cohort study

Diagnosis on admission

Events/N

Model 1

  

Model 2

  
  

OR

95% CI

p

OR

95% CI

p

STEMI

36/454

3.2700 

1.6800–6.3700 

< 0.001 

3.0700 

1.4100–6.6600 

 0.0050

 T1

6/113

Reference

  

Reference

  

 T2

9/158

1.0800

0.3700–3.1200

0.8910

0.8700

0.2900–2.6500

0.8050

 T3

21/183

2.3100

0.9000–5.9200

0.0800

1.9500

0.7300–5.2000

0.1800

NSTEMI

28/454 

3.2300 

1.4100–7.4300 

0.0060 

2.9900 

1.1000–8.1100 

0.0310 

 T1

7/154

Reference

  

Reference

  

 T2

5/156

0.7000

0.2200–2.2400

0.5430

0.6100

0.1700–2.2300

0.4530

 T3

16/144

2.6300

1.0500–6.5800

0.0400

2.7000

0.9700–7.5600

0.0580

UA

16/1,031

1.9500 

0.6900–5.5500 

0.2090 

1.5100 

0.4900–4.7000 

0.4740 

 T1

5/379

Reference

  

Reference

  

 T2

3/332

0.6800

0.1600–2.8800

0.6020

0.6700

0.1500–3.0200

0.5990

 T3

8/320

1.9200

0.6200–5.9200

0.2580

1.5200

0.4400–5.2100

0.5040

  1. ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction, STEMI; Non-ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction, NSTEMI; Unstable Angina, UA; Stress Hyperglycaemic Ratio, SHR; Group with the Lowest SHR Value (reference group), T1; Group with Intermediate SHR Values, T2; Group with the Highest SHR Value, T3; Odds Ratio, OR; Confidence Interval, CI; p-value, p