🫀 Validated Chest Pain Triage Tool

HEART Score
Calculator

Risk-stratify chest pain patients in the ED. The HEART Score estimates 6-week MACE risk using History, ECG, Age, Risk Factors, and Troponin — validated in 10+ prospective studies.

HEART
5-component score
0–10
Scoring range
6 wks
MACE prediction
98%
NPV at low risk

HEART Score Calculator

Score each component 0–2 · Total 0–10 · For chest pain presentations

H — History
E — ECG
A — Age
R — Risk Factors
T — Troponin
Live HEART Score
out of 10
0Low ≤3Mod 4–6High 7–1010
HEART Score
6-week MACE risk estimate
Low (0–3)Moderate (4–6)High (7–10)
Score breakdown
H
History
E
ECG
A
Age
R
Risk Factors
T
Troponin
Total HEART Score
Risk Category
6-Week MACE Risk
Recommended Action

Clinical interpretation

Score components

⚠ Medical Disclaimer: Educational tool only. Not medical advice. Clinical decisions require serial troponin testing, ECG interpretation, and physician judgment. Reference: Six AJ et al., Neth Heart J 2010;18:422–428. Backus BE et al., Crit Pathw Cardiol 2010;9:86–91.

About the HEART score calculator

The HEART score gives emergency doctors a number. That number tells them whether to send a chest pain patient home or admit them.

5 variables. Each scored 0, 1, or 2. Total out of 10. Takes about 90 seconds to calculate.

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Built for the ED

TIMI and GRACE assume you already know the patient has ACS. HEART works before the diagnosis. That's the whole point.

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3 clear tiers

0–3 = go home. 4–6 = watch and wait. 7–10 = call cardiology now. The score maps directly to a clinical action.

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~98% NPV at low risk

In the Six et al. 2010 validation, a score of 0–3 missed almost nothing. 1.7% MACE rate. That's a number you can discharge on.

How the score is calculated

Each component scores 0, 1, or 2. Add them up.

HEART vs TIMI vs GRACE

TIMI was built for confirmed ACS patients. GRACE predicts 6-month mortality after you already know what happened. Both assume a diagnosis you don't have yet when someone walks into the ED with chest pain.

Mahler et al. tested all 3 head-to-head in a 2015 US study of 1,070 patients. HEART beat TIMI on sensitivity and GRACE on specificity. For undifferentiated chest pain, it's the right tool.

HEART score vs the AHA PREVENT calculator

Different questions entirely. HEART asks: does this person need to be admitted right now? The AHA PREVENT calculator asks: what's this stable outpatient's 10-year cardiac risk?

Use HEART in the ED. Use PREVENT in the clinic. Both are free here.

Frequently asked questions

What does HEART stand for?

History, ECG, Age, Risk factors, Troponin.

What is a normal HEART score?

0–3 is low risk. There's no "normal" since any chest pain warrants a look, but a score of 0–3 carries about 1.7% MACE risk at 6 weeks. That's dischargeable territory.

What HEART score triggers admission?

4–6 usually means observation with serial troponins. 7–10 means call cardiology, because 65% of those patients have a major cardiac event within 6 weeks.

Is HEART score the same as heart calcium score?

No. The HEART score is a clinical triage tool for acute chest pain. The heart calcium score (CAC score) is a CT measurement of calcified coronary plaque, used for long-term risk in asymptomatic stable patients. Completely different clinical questions.

What is a good heart calcium score?

Zero is ideal. 1–99 is mild, 100–299 is moderate, 300+ is high risk. A score above 300 in someone without symptoms often changes the treatment conversation significantly.

How do I lower my heart calcium score?

You can't reverse calcified plaque. But you can slow its growth: statins, getting LDL under 70 mg/dL if you're high risk, blood pressure under 130/80, quitting smoking. Your cardiologist should drive this.