Publications by authors named "Kavadias M"

Body surface maps recorded from 35 ischemic patients with normal resting 12-lead electrocardiograms were compared with those obtained from 36 age- and sex-matched normal subjects. From instantaneous maps of each subject 187 variables were derived relating to the configuration (80 variables) and magnitude (104 variables) of the potential distribution and duration of the electrocardiographic intervals (3 variables). By using stepwise discriminant analysis we selected 3 variables whose linear combination enabled us to correctly allocate 91% of the study population (jacknife procedure; specificity 92%, sensitivity 91%).

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Body surface potential maps were recorded from 117 thoracic sites and 3 limb electrodes in 173 normal subjects older than 30 years of age and 122 patients with clinically "pure" left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy. Typical LV hypertrophy map patterns were identified at successive instants during the PQRST waveform by removing from sequential LV hypertrophy maps the corresponding normal variability range at each electrode site. The presence in individual patients of 1 or more patterns typical in time and location of LV hypertrophy allowed retrospective assignment to the LV hypertrophy group.

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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.

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We investigated if it is possible to use the data collected in twins to identify areas with high rates of operative deliveries, preterm deliveries and low birthweight infants in singletons. Our data correspond to all deliveries registered in Belgium in 1983. A significant correlation was found between the rates of cesarean sections in twins and in singletons.

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Body surface potential maps were recorded from 120 electrode sites in 236 normal subjects and 258 patients with initial evidence of either anterior myocardial infarction (MI) or inferior MI to identify characteristic map patterns in both groups. After time normalization, averaged map distributions were displayed at 18 equal time intervals during both QRS and ST-T waveforms from the normal, anterior MI and inferior MI groups. At each time instant, the 120-point averaged normal map was subtracted in turn from the corresponding anterior and inferior MI maps; the resulting differences at each electrode site were divided by the pooled standard deviation and the obtained values (discriminant indexes), plotted as contour lines with 1 standard deviation increments, producing discriminant maps for each bi-group comparison.

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