Twelve-lead ST-segment monitoring is a widely used tool for capturing focal ischemia and transient intermittent episodes. However, continuous registration of all 10 electrodes is impractical in clinical settings. This study investigated the accuracy of 2 derived 12-lead strategies that required 6 electrodes, including all limb leads, and 2 precordial leads by using population-based (generalized) and individualized (patient-specific) reconstruction coefficients to derive the additional 4 chest leads. A total of 26,880 simultaneous digital conventional 12-lead generalized and patient-specific electrocardiograms were monitored over 112 hours in 39 patients during percutaneous coronary intervention, including 159 balloon occlusions in 63 arteries, to test accuracy at rest and during ischemia. Occlusion duration was 78 seconds (range 42 to 96) in the left main coronary in 2 patients, the left anterior descending artery in 15, the right coronary artery in 10, the circumflex artery in 2, and graft segments in 5 patients. Average summated 12-lead ST deviation over the study population at baseline was 377 microV (range 104 to 1,718), which increased at peak ischemia to an average of 1,086 microV (range 282 to 4,099). Median absolute differences at peak ischemic ST deviation were 25 microV in lead V(1), 0 microV in lead V(2), 35 microV in lead V(3), 34 microV in lead V(4), 0 microV in lead V(5), 11 microV in lead V(6), and 114 microV for summated 12-lead ST deviation with the generalized method and 7 microV in lead V(1), 4 microV in lead V(2), 1 muV in lead V(3), 5 microV in lead V(4), 4 microV in lead V(5), 9 microV in lead V(6), and 83 microV for the summated 12-lead ST deviation with the patient-specific method. Limb leads (I, II, III, aVR, aVL, and aVF) were identical in all patients. Thus, generalized and patient-specific methods derived from 12-lead electrocardiography using actual limb and 2 precordial electrodes accurately derived the additional chest leads at rest and during ischemia. These approaches appear to be more practical than conventional 10-electrode monitoring but preserve high accuracy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2004.08.031 | DOI Listing |
J Electrocardiol
January 2011
Lariboisière Hospital APHP, University Paris Diderot, INSERM U942, Paris, France.
Background: Spontaneous type 1 electrocardiographic (ECG) is a risk factor for arrhythmic events in Brugada patients but the importance of the proportion of time with a type 1 ECG is unknown.
Patients And Methods: Thirty-four Brugada patients (15 symptomatic) underwent a 24-hour 12-lead ECG recording. One-minute averaged waveforms displaying ST-segment elevation above 200 microV, with descending ST-segment and negative T-wave polarity on leads V(1)-V(3) were considered as type 1 Brugada ECG.
Orv Hetil
July 2010
Debreceni Egyetem, Orvos- és Egészségtudományi Centrum I. Belgyógyászati Klinika, Sürgosségi Orvostan Tanszék, Debrecen.
Microvolt T-wave alternant (microV-TWA) is a beat-to-beat fluctuation in the amplitude of T-wave at a microvolt level. The amount of variation is small, on the order of microvolts, so sensitive digital signal processing techniques are required to detect microV-TWA. The appearance of microV-TWA has been suggested as a predictor of susceptibility to lethal ventricular tachyarrhythmias, and sudden cardiac death in different patients' populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Physiol Pharmacol
June 2010
Department of Surgery and Anesthesiology Science, Ophthalmology Service, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is an inherited retinal disorder clinically characterized by a pale, waxy optic nerve head, attenuated retinal blood vessels, and bone spicule pigment in the retina. Hemodynamic studies have demonstrated that RP is associated with a reduction in the retinal and choroidal blood flow. Retinal hemodynamic impairment is also present in early stages of RP, and various hypotheses have been advanced as to the cause.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Noninvasive Electrocardiol
January 2010
1st University Department of Cardiology, Hippokration Hospital, 22, Miltiadou Str., 15561, Athens, Greece.
Background: P waves > or = 110 ms in adults and > or = 90 ms in children are considered abnormal, signifying interatrial block, particularly in the first case.
Methods: To evaluate the prevalence of interatrial block in healthy school-aged children, we obtained 12-lead digital ECGs (Cardioperfect 1.1, CardioControl NV, Delft, The Netherlands) of 664 healthy children (349 males/315 females, age range 6-14 years old).
Heart Rhythm
March 2010
Department of Cardiovascular and Respiratory Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science, Shiga, Japan.
Background: Terminal P-wave inversion in lead V(1) representing left atrial overload has been considered a precursor of atrial fibrillation (AF).
Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine whether this P-wave morphologic characteristic can predict the development of AF.
Methods: Digital analysis of 12-lead ECGs was performed to enroll patients with P terminal force > or =0.
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