Long-term ambulatory electrocardiographic (Holter) monitoring is frequently used to evaluate patients with various cardiovascular complaints, including palpitations, dyspnea, discomfort in the chest, dizziness, and syncope. In the present study, 518 consecutive 24-hour electrocardiographic recordings were reviewed to determine correlations between cardiac diagnoses, presenting complaints, and specific electrocardiographic abnormalities. Two hundred seventy-four patients (53 percent) had significant arrhythmias; 212 (41 percent) had significant ventricular arrhythmias, and 106 (20 percent) significant atrial arrhythmias, including 44 patients (8 percent) with both.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty-seven patients with nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (greater than or equal to triplets) were identified retrospectively from a population of 518 consecutive patients referred for 24-hour Holter monitoring and studied to determine the prognostic significance of this finding. Ten of these 37 patients suffered sudden cardiac death during a mean follow-up of 19 +/- 5 months. Nine of 19 patients with a diagnosis of congestive cardiomyopathy or history of congestive heart failure died suddently compared to only one of the other 18 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe monitored, by the Holter method, 23 clinically stable maintenance hemodialysis patients for 5 +/- (SEM) 2 hours before hemodialysis, 5.0 +/- 0.5 hours during hemodialysis, and 13 +/- 3 hours after hemodialysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVariations in the frequency of complex ventricular arrhythmias were evaluated by consecutive 24-hour long-term electrocardiographic recordings over 4 days using a two-channel recorder and computer-assisted analysis system with a weighted relative mean error of 7.5 +/ 5% (SD). Twenty patients (mean age 58 +/- 9 years [SD] with various cardiac disorders were selected if they had a daily average of more than 30 ventricular ectopic complexes per hour.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn an attempt to establish criteria to enable recognition of patients with surgically correctable causes of excessive mediastinal bleeding, 250 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery were reviewed. Ten (4 percent) required reexploration for excessive postoperative mediastinal bleeding and were compared with 95 consecutive control patients. There were no statistically significant differences in preoperative coagulation studies, use of aspirin or warfarin, number of vessels bypassed or bypass time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthmozin, a phenothiazine derivative, was developed in the Soviet Union as a new antiarrhythmic agent. We evaluated ethmozin using a controlled single-blinded in-hospital protocol in 14 ambulatory patients with ventricular ectopy ranging from an average of 48 to 1,801 depolarizations per hour and in eight patients with atrial ectopy ranging from 63 to 693 depolarizations per hour. Placebo was administered for the first 3 days, followed by ethmozin from 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPacing Clin Electrophysiol
November 1979
Carotid sinus massage affects supraventricular arrhythmias primarily through vagotonic effects on the sinus and AV nodes, but vagal innervation of the ventricle also exists and has been shown to have functional significance. The case presented here illustrates an unusual example of a ventricular tachycardia that was repeatedly converted to normal sinus rhythm by carotid sinus massage following administration of digoxin. The clinician should be aware that a wide QRS-complex tachycardia that responds to carotid sinus massage is not necessarily supraventricular in origin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunduscopic examination was performed in 70 non diabetic, nonhypertensive patients without valvular heart disease undergoing coronary angiography for evaluation of chest pain syndromes to determine if retinal arteriolar changes could reliably predict presence of coronary artery disease. Retinal arteriolar changes were graded with respect to light reflex, vessel caliber, arteriovenous crossing defects, and vessel tortuosity without knowledge of angiographic findings. Each coronary vessel was graded with respect to its most occlusive lesion by angiography; coronary index was derived for each patient without knowledge of eye findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiac output estimates by a new closed-system automatic injection thermodilution method (COI-TD) were compared serially with the direct Fick technique (COFICK) and the standard open-system manual injection thermodilution method (COTD). Comparison with cardiac outputs determined simultaneously by the direct Fick technique in 100 measurements involving ten patients showed close agreement with the new closed system method using both 25 degrees C and 3 degrees C injectates. The cardiac output range was between 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEighty patients (69 with documented or suspected recurrent ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation, ten with left bundle-branch block, and one with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome) underwent both right ventricular and left ventricular programmed electrical stimulation, including ventricular pacing and the introduction of one or two ventricular extrastimuli or electrode catheter mapping of the left ventricle (or both). Left ventricular catheters were introduced precutaneously via the femoral artery (of 61 patients, one required secondary repair) or via brachial arteriotomy (of 19 patients, two required secondary repair). All patients received an intravenously administered bolus of hep arin (5,000 units) following the insertion of the left ventricular catheter and then 1,000 units/hr after the first hour of study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo or more morphologically distinct ventricular tachycardias were observed during electrophysiologic study in 14 patients with chronic sustained ventricular tachycardia. Nine of these patients had clinical ventricular tachycardia with multiple morphologies. During the study 13 patients manifested both right bundle branch block (RBBB) and left bundle branch block (LBBB) morphologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty patients with recurrent sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) underwent serial electrophysiological studies (EPS) 1) to determine the predictive value of the EPS in the selection of antiarrhythmic therapy, and 2) to establish the therapeutic efficacy of available antiarrhythmic agents. In each patient VT could be reproducibly initiated by programmed stimulation. After control EPS, the effects of several drugs (lidocaine, procainamide, quinidine, disopyramide and diphenylhydantoin) on the ability to initiate VT were assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFixed coupled ventricular premature depolarizations (VPDs) are usually considered reentrant; recent experimental models have demonstrated that parasystolic rhythms may also appear in fixed coupled patterns. To analyze the mechanisms of fixed coupled VPDs, 60 exercise tests were chosen to evaluate the response of VPD coupling intervals to changes in cycle length of the dominant supraventricular rhythm. Selection criteria included the presence of frequent, unifocal VPDs that were fixed coupled (variation less than or equal to 80 msec) at any one cycle length, with the persistence of VPDs at several different cycle lengths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
November 1978
To evaluate the potential effect of aspirin, a platelet inhibitory agent, on postoperative bleeding complications after coronary artery bypass graft surgery, we compared each of nine patients who had taken aspirin within 7 days prior to operation to one or two control subjects (total 16 patients) matched for age, sex, extent of coronary disease, number of grafts placed total operative time, bypass time, and preoperative use of propranolol. Preoperative prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, and platelet counts were normal for all patients. Mean mediastinal blood loss was significantly greater in the aspirin group (919 +/- 164 ml.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe components of the reentrant circuit were evaluated in 26 patients in whom sustained ventricular tachycardia could be reproducibly initiated or terminated, or both. Observations suggesting that the proximal His-Purkinje system was not a requisite component included (1) lack of requirement for retrograde His-Purkinje delay or bundle branck reentry, or both, for initiation of the tachycardia: (2) anterograde depolarization of the His bundle during ventricular tachycardial without alteration of the QRS configuration or cycle length; and (3) the presence of random retrograde His potentials during the tachycardia. Evidence that the reentrant circuit was localized to a small area of the ventricles included (1) the ability to capture large segments of the ventricles transiently or continuously with occurrence of intermittent or continuous supraventricular capture either spontaneously or with atrial pacing without effect on the tachycardia.
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