Identification of best electrocardiographic leads for diagnosing left ventricular hypertrophy by statistical analysis of body surface potential maps

Autor: Pentti M. Rautaharju, Fred Kornreich, Milan B. Horacek, Michail Kavadias, Terrence J. Montague
Rok vydání: 1988
Předmět:
Zdroj: The American Journal of Cardiology. 62:1285-1291
ISSN: 0002-9149
Popis: In view of the increased risk of cardiovascular mortality associated with left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy, early recognition and quantitation of LV hypertrophy are important clinical goals. The standard 12-lead electrocardiogram is the easiest and most widely used noninvasive method for the diagnosis of LV hypertrophy; unfortunately, the diagnostic accuracy of commonly used electrocardiographic criteria remains unsatisfactory. Body surface potential maps contain diagnostic information not present in conventional lead systems. The present investigation combines the increased information content of surface maps with the power of multivariate statistical techniques in order to identify practical subsets of electrocardiographic leads that would allow improved diagnosis of LV hypertrophy. Discriminant analysis was performed on 120-lead data simultaneously recorded in 250 normal subjects and 214 patients with LV hypertrophy using as features instantaneous voltages on time-normalized P, PR, QRS and ST-T waveforms as well as the duration of these waveforms. Leads and features for optimal separation of 173 normal subjects aged greater than or equal to 30 years from 122 patients with pure LV hypertrophy were selected. A total of 6 features from 5 torso sites accounted for a specificity of 97% and a sensitivity of 94%. The single most potent discriminator was the duration of the P wave; voltages were measured in mid and late P on leads located in the lower left parasternal area, the left precordial region and the upper right back, in mid-QRS on a lead positioned 10 cm below V1 and slightly before the peak of the T wave on a lead in the lower left flank.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Databáze: OpenAIRE