Combined HEART Score (short-term chest pain triage) and HeartScore / SCORE (approx 10-year CVD risk) calculators, with clear clinical guidance and shareable results.
Know Your Heart, Fast Triage and Long-Term Risk in One Place
If your heart had a CV, it would want you to be informed. Whether you’re checking acute chest-pain urgency in an emergency or just being sensible about your 10-year cardiovascular risk, this combined tool gives two complementary views: the HEART Score for short-term triage, and the HeartScore / SCORE guidance for long-term risk.
Two different jobs, same goal: safety and clarity
The HEART Score is a rapid, bedside-friendly clinical tool used by emergency teams to classify chest-pain patients into low, moderate, or high risk of a major cardiac event in the near term. It relies on five elements, History, ECG, Age, Risk factors, and Troponin, each scored 0–2, producing a total of 0–10. Low scores often support safe early discharge pathways, while high scores prompt urgent investigation. This calculator helps you compute that score quickly, while reminding users it’s not a substitute for professional assessment.
Long Term Prevention
For longer-term prevention, the ESC HeartScore / SCORE system estimates a person’s 10-year risk of fatal cardiovascular disease, using age, sex, smoking status, blood pressure, cholesterol and country-specific calibration. Because national cardiovascular mortality patterns vary, the official HeartScore tool from the ESC and the updated SCORE2 models are the go-to resources for an authoritative result. This page provides an on-page approximate guide and an easy button to open the official ESC HeartScore tool for a calibrated estimate.
❤️ Heart Score + HeartScore (SCORE) Calculator
Estimate your cardiac risk based on two trusted medical tools: the HEART Score for acute chest pain and the HeartScore/SCORE for long-term cardiovascular risk.
HEART Score Section
HeartScore / SCORE Section
Use it Wisely
Both calculators are strictly informational. The HEART Score is clinically useful for triage in acute settings but must be interpreted along with serial troponins and clinical judgement. The HeartScore / SCORE chart is country-specific, use the ESC interactive tool for formal management decisions. If in doubt about chest pain or cardiovascular risk, seek medical advice promptly.
Final word - Heart Facts you can Act on, Not Panic About
You’ve now got both a quick triage lamp and a long-range map for your cardiovascular journey. Use the HEART Score responsibly in acute scenarios, and use the HeartScore link for a formal, country-calibrated 10-year number. Share results with your clinician, copy them to yourself for records, and tell a friend who still thinks “feeling fine” is a risk assessment.
If this helped, drop feedback, was the HEART summary too blunt, or was the HeartScore guide too cautious? Want any adjustments? Let us know and I’ll build it.






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