| Literature DB >> 31675996 |
Sukardi Suba1, Michele M Pelter2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) are one of the most common arrhythmias detected from electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring. PVCs were thought to cause lethal arrhythmias and thus were closely monitored and treated. However, in current practice, PVCs generally do not required treatment. There is also concern that PVCs contribute to excessive alarms and lead to alarm fatigue. Practice guidelines for in-hospital monitoring state that monitoring for PVCs may be indicated on some patients but do not recommend continuous ECG monitoring. Despite these recommendations, PVC monitoring practices remain part of routine care, especially in the intensive care unit, for worry of missing potentially significant arrhythmia events. A thorough scoping review of the literature regarding the clinical significance of PVC is imperative, precisely to map out the evidence on the diagnostic and prognostic values of PVCs and to identify research gaps on this issue.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical significance; ECG monitoring; Premature ventricular contraction; Scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31675996 PMCID: PMC6824026 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-019-1168-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Search strategy
| Database | Query |
|---|---|
| CINAHL | (MH “Premature Ventricular Contractions”)
|
| Embase | (‘heart ventricle extrasystole’/exp. OR ‘heart ventricle extrasystole’) AND ([article]/lim OR [article in press]/lim) AND [english]/lim AND ([young adult]/lim OR [adult]/lim OR [middle aged]/lim OR [aged]/lim OR [very elderly]/lim) AND [clinical study]/lim |
| PubMed | premature ventricular contraction [MeSH]
|
| Web of Science Core Collection | ((premature ventricular contraction) OR (ventricular extrasystole) OR (ventricular extra systole) OR (premature ventricular beat))
|
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram [13]
Data extraction form
| Author and year | |
| Title of the study | |
| Study aim/research question | |
| Population | |
| Country | |
| Sample size | |
| Patients’ characteristics (age, gender) | |
| Patients with/without cardiovascular disease | |
| Primary/secondary end point | |
| Intervention (if any) | |
| Study design | |
| Setting (ambulatory/outpatient, emergency department, in-hospital) | |
| Data collection/methodology | |
| ECG data collection procedure (duration, electrode lead placement) | |
| ECG recordings method (standard 12-lead, EASI leads, Holter, bedside monitor) | |
| ECG data annotation method (if applicable) | |
| PVC criteria | |
| Key findings | |
| Conclusion of the study | |
| Comments |
Quality Appraisal Checklist—Quantitative Studies Reporting Correlations and Associations [14]
| Population | |
| Source of population well described | |
| Eligible population representative of the source of population | |
| Participants represent eligible population | |
| Selection/methods | |
| Selection bias minimized | |
| Reasonable variables selection | |
| Acceptably low contamination | |
| Confounding factors identified and controlled | |
| Outcomes | |
| Outcome measures and procedures reliable | |
| Outcome measurements complete | |
| All important outcomes assessed | |
| Similar follow-up time in exposed and comparison groups | |
| Follow-up time meaningful | |
| Analyses | |
| Study was sufficiently powered to detect an intervention (if any) | |
| Multiple explanatory variables considered in the analysis | |
| Analytical methods appropriate | |
| Precision of association given or calculable and meaningful | |
| Summary | |
| Study results internally valid | |
| Findings are generalizable to the source population |