| Literature DB >> 28480632 |
Jonathan S Steinberg1,2, Niraj Varma3, Iwona Cygankiewicz4, Peter Aziz3, Paweł Balsam5, Adrian Baranchuk6, Daniel J Cantillon3, Polychronis Dilaveris7, Sergio J Dubner8, Nabil El-Sherif9, Jaroslaw Krol10, Malgorzata Kurpesa11, Maria Teresa La Rovere12, Suave S Lobodzinski13, Emanuela T Locati14, Suneet Mittal15, Brian Olshansky16, Ewa Piotrowicz17, Leslie Saxon18, Peter H Stone19, Larisa Tereshchenko20,21, Mintu P Turakhia22, Gioia Turitto23, Neil J Wimmer19, Richard L Verrier24, Wojciech Zareba1, Ryszard Piotrowicz25.
Abstract
Ambulatory ECG (AECG) is very commonly employed in a variety of clinical contexts to detect cardiac arrhythmias and/or arrhythmia patterns which are not readily obtained from the standard ECG. Accurate and timely characterization of arrhythmias is crucial to direct therapies that can have an important impact on diagnosis, prognosis or patient symptom status. The rhythm information derived from the large variety of AECG recording systems can often lead to appropriate and patient-specific medical and interventional management. The details in this document provide background and framework from which to apply AECG techniques in clinical practice, as well as clinical research.Entities:
Keywords: Holter; ambulatory ECG monitoring; event monitor; loop recorder; telemetry; transtelephonic
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28480632 PMCID: PMC6931745 DOI: 10.1111/anec.12447
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol ISSN: 1082-720X Impact factor: 1.468