Background: Transoesophageal cardiostimulation is a semiinvasive method of stimulation of atrii enabling the performance of the programmed atrial stimulation without the inevitability of an invasive vascular approach. This method was used in 124 patients with the following indication spectrum. Diagnostic indications: total 82%, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (SVT), and WPW sy-22%, tachycardia with wide QRS-complex-8%. SSS syndrome and bradycardia-20%, sycopes and collapses with unclear etiology-13%, palpitations-11%, control of antiarrhythmic therapy-4%, and other states-6%. Therapeutic indications: total-18%, versions of paroxysmal SVT and flutter of atrii.
Results: The patients with SVT were assumed to develop the arrhythmogenic mechanism--AV nodal re-entry tachycardia in 80%, orthodrome AV-re-entry tachycardia in 30%, and flutter of atrii in 20%. All patients with WPW-syndrome were stratified by the use of this method. The origin of this state from ventricular arrhythmia was verified in 40% of patients with tachycardia with a wide QRS complex. In coincidence with other indications, the diagnostic benefit of transoesophageal cardiostimulation was evaluated as follows: syncopes-68%, palpitations-64%, syndrome SSS and bradycardia-48%. The therapeutic indication of SVT version and flutter of atrii, was totally successful in 40%, partly successful in 45% and unsuccessful in 15% of patients.
Conclusion: Transoesophageal cardiostimulation has contributed to the assessment of the diagnosis in 69% of patients and has acutely managed arrhythmia in 85% of cases. According to our experience, this method is effective in the initial management of patients with arrhythmia. Its low technical and economic demands make its wider utilisation appropriate in clinical practice of internal medicine. (Tab. 4, Fig. 9, Ref. 22).
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The aim of the study was to assess tolerance to and the appropriateness of multi-factor stress-echoCG for the diagnostics of initial stages of coronary artery disease (CAD) in out-patient practice. The subjects of the study were 25 men aged 32 to 51 (mean age 43.2 +/- 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: Choice of optimal cardiostimulation regimens using transesophageal pacing for design of antirecurrence antiarrhythmic therapy (AAT) in IHD patients.
Material And Methods: 198 patients with IHD complicated by paroxysms of atrial fibrillation (AF) and atrial flutter (AFl) received AAT chosen at concurrent, frequent, volley UHF and slowly increasing UHF stimulation using transesophageal pacing.
Results: Slowly increasing UHF stimulation proved most effective both in detection and reproduction of induced paroxysms of AF and AFl.
Bratisl Lek Listy
November 1997
Oddelenie arytmií Slovenského ústavu srdcových chorôb v Bratislave.
Background: Transoesophageal cardiostimulation is a semiinvasive method of stimulation of atrii enabling the performance of the programmed atrial stimulation without the inevitability of an invasive vascular approach. This method was used in 124 patients with the following indication spectrum. Diagnostic indications: total 82%, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (SVT), and WPW sy-22%, tachycardia with wide QRS-complex-8%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors propose a new method of treating coronary patients with angina pectoris of effort and at rest. It involves combination of transesophageal pacing with simultaneous intravenous administration of phosphobion. The treatment given to 10 coronary patients produced positive antiischemic and hemodynamic effect against its absence in control subjects treated conventionally with ATP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing diagnostic transesophageal electrical cardiostimulation, sinus node function, sinoatrial and atrioventricular conductivity have been studied in 30 patients with acute clophelin poisoning. The results of pharmacological tests with atropine and alupent are presented. Control examinations have been performed on discharge.
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