To evaluate spontaneous variability of ST-segment changes within the Holter ECG, in 20 patients with documented coronary heart disease (CHD) long-term ambulatory ECG recordings were performed over 3 consecutive days, when the patients were only receiving short-acting nitrates. ST-segment alterations per day were measured as the area beneath the baseline (mV x min), and were compared day-to-day intraindividually. The intra-day variations of ST-segment area alterations were a factor of about 10, when compared with the baseline values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 70 patients (3 females and 67 males), aged 16-72 years (mean: 51 +/- 9 years), the low noise ECG was recorded from body surface by the signal averaging and the high resolution beat-to-beat techniques. We found 61 patients were suffering from coronary heart disease, 4 had atypical coronary heart disease (syndrome X), 4 had dilatative cardiomyopathy, and one had the long QT syndrome (Romano-Ward syndrome). We found the following recovery rates for ventricular late potentials within the ST segment with the averaging technique: clearcut in 13/53 patients, doubtful in 16/53 patients, and late potentials absent in 26/53 patients.
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