Beat-to-beat detection of ventricular late potentials with high-resolution electrocardiography
Autor: | Richard Adamec, Jean Richez, Marc Zimmermann, Philippe Simonin |
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Rok vydání: | 1991 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Heart Ventricles Beat (acoustics) Coronary Disease Beat detection Coronary artery disease Electrocardiography QRS complex Heart Rate Tachycardia Internal medicine High resolution electrocardiography medicine Humans cardiovascular diseases Monomorphic Ventricular Tachycardia business.industry Retarded potential Equipment Design Ventricular late potentials medicine.disease Electronics Medical Surgery Evaluation Studies as Topic Cardiology Female Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Filtration |
Zdroj: | American Heart Journal. 121:576-585 |
ISSN: | 0002-8703 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0002-8703(91)90728-z |
Popis: | To detect dynamic changes of VLPs we developed a low-noise, HR-ECG with a gain of 10(5)-10(6)X. This system allows the beat-to-beat detection of low-amplitude signals at the bedside in a nonshielded room without any averaging process. Analysis was performed in 39 normal subjects (group A: 27 men, 12 women, mean age, 28 +/- 8 years), in 98 patients with coronary artery disease without documented sustained ventricular tachycardia (group B: 86 men, 12 women, mean age, 59 +/- 10 years) and in 41 patients coronary artery disease with sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (group C: 36 men, 5 women; mean age 63 +/- 9 years). Comparison was made with time-domain signal-averaging (SA-ECG) in all cases at the same electrode position and with identical band-pass filtering. In group A no VLPs were detected; the total filtered QRS duration was 84 +/- 8 msec (mean +/- SD), and the time interval during which the terminal QRS did not exceed 40 microV (I-40) was less than 30 msec in all cases (mean, 17 +/- 6 msec). In group B, VLPs were detected by HR-ECG in 34 of 98 patients (35%); the total QRS duration was 102 +/- 16 msec (mean +/- SD, p less than 0.01 vs group A), and the I-40 was 29 +/- 13 msec (mean +/- SD, p less than 0.01 vs (group A). In group C, VLPs were detected by HR-ECG in 38 of 41 patients (93%); the total QRS duration was 123 +/- 22 msec (mean +/- SD, p less than 0.01 vs group A and group B), and the I-40 was 40 +/- 14 msec (mean +/- SD, p less than 0.01 vs group A and group B). Concordant results between HR-ECG and SA-ECG were observed in 91% of the cases (59 positive and 103 negative results). Late potentials that exhibited dynamic variations were detected by HR-ECG alone in 13 cases, and very low amplitude VLPs were detected by SA-ECG alone in three cases. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates the feasibility of body-surface recording of VLPs on a beat-to-beat basis, without any averaging process, at the bedside in a nonshielded room. This new approach may allow the study of dynamic changes of VLPs during spontaneous ventricular arrhythmias or ischemia. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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