“…1,2 Although the incidence of cardiac pain is low, the fear of a severe underlying cardiac pathology and the subsequent risk of a sudden death determined the increase of plasma troponin (TN) determination as basic evaluation in pediatric patients admitted to ED with chest pain. [2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] The alarm elements for cardiac chest pain, considered as "red flags," are represented by chest pain during exercise (in the initial and peak phases), association with syncope during physical exercise, nausea and vomiting, vertigo, and irradiation and/or increasing in the supine position. 10,11 Abnormalities on the physical examination that were considered as red flags included pathological heart murmur, palpitations, pericardial rub, abnormal second heart sound, distant heart sounds, hepatomegaly, decreased femoral or peripheral pulses, peripheral edema, painful or swollen extremities, tachypnea, and fever.…”