Curated insights • How it Works • Practical Pearls • Evidence Base
Originally validated in the pre-reperfusion era (1967), but repeatedly validated in the modern era of primary PCI and potent antithrombotic therapy. Even though overall mortality rates have fallen, the predictive gradient across the four classes remains robust.
The Killip classification is highly dependent on bedside physical examination skills, which have poor-to-moderate interobserver reliability among modern clinicians, especially for Class II vs Class III distinction. An S3 gallop can be difficult to auscultate in a noisy ED or CCU environment.
Because of its strong predictive power, the Killip class is incorporated directly into the GRACE score. A patient in Killip Class IV automatically receives a massive bump in their 6-month expected mortality in the GRACE model.
Treatment of myocardial infarction in a coronary care unit. A two year experience with 250 patients.
Predictive value of the Killip classification in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention for acute myocardial infarction.
Killip Classification: Stratifies risk of in-hospital mortality in patients with acute myocardial infarction based on clinical signs of heart failure.
Curated insights • How it Works • Practical Pearls • Evidence Base
Originally validated in the pre-reperfusion era (1967), but repeatedly validated in the modern era of primary PCI and potent antithrombotic therapy. Even though overall mortality rates have fallen, the predictive gradient across the four classes remains robust.
The Killip classification is highly dependent on bedside physical examination skills, which have poor-to-moderate interobserver reliability among modern clinicians, especially for Class II vs Class III distinction. An S3 gallop can be difficult to auscultate in a noisy ED or CCU environment.
Because of its strong predictive power, the Killip class is incorporated directly into the GRACE score. A patient in Killip Class IV automatically receives a massive bump in their 6-month expected mortality in the GRACE model.
Treatment of myocardial infarction in a coronary care unit. A two year experience with 250 patients.
Predictive value of the Killip classification in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention for acute myocardial infarction.