| Literature DB >> 7505924 |
B Strasberg1, S Abboud, J Kusniec, S Inbar, N Zafrir, A Mager, A Sagie, S Sclarovsky.
Abstract
One hundred consecutive patients recovering from an acute myocardial infarction underwent, prior to home discharge, signal-averaged electrocardiography (ECG), left ventriculography, and 24-hour Holter ECG recording. The signal-averaged ECG was recorded and analyzed using two procedures: the orthogonal bipolar XYZ lead configuration with a bidirectional filter; and a precordial unipolar lead configuration with a nonrecursive digital filter. An abnormal signal-averaged ECG was seen in 40% of patients with the XYZ system and in 30% of patients in the precordial method, abnormal ejection fraction (< 40%) in 24% of patients and high grade ectopy activity in 22%. During the 24-month follow-up period, 12 patients (12%) had an arrhythmic event defined as either sudden death (11 patients) or sustained ventricular tachycardia (1 patient). Neither the signal-averaged ECG with the XYZ configuration, the abnormal ejection fraction, nor the high grade ectopy were able to statistically predict a higher arrhythmic event rate. The signal-averaged ECG with the precordial configuration was able to statistically predict a higher arrhythmic event rate, P < 0.03; odds ratio = 3.96. The combination of the orthogonal XYZ configuration signal-averaged ECG with the ejection fraction (P < 0.01, odds ratio = 7.33), or with ejection fraction and Holter monitoring (P < 0.06, odds ratio = 6.17) was able to predict a higher arrhythmic event rate. The combination of the precordial configuration signal-averaged ECG with the ejection fraction (P < 0.002, odds ratio = 14.4), or with ejection fraction and Holter monitoring (P < 0.06, odds ratio = 10) was able to better predict a higher arrhythmic event rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1993 PMID: 7505924 DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8159.1993.tb01016.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pacing Clin Electrophysiol ISSN: 0147-8389 Impact factor: 1.976