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Recovery of ventricular late potentials from body surface using the signal averaging and high resolution ECG techniques.

Authors :
Hombach V
Höpp HW
Kebbel U
Treis I
Osterspey A
Eggeling T
Winter U
Hirche H
Hilger HH
Source :
Clinical cardiology [Clin Cardiol] 1986 Aug; Vol. 9 (8), pp. 361-8.
Publication Year :
1986

Abstract

In 70 patients (3 females and 67 males), aged 16-72 years (mean: 51 +/- 9 years), the low noise ECG was recorded from body surface by the signal averaging and the high resolution beat-to-beat techniques. We found 61 patients were suffering from coronary heart disease, 4 had atypical coronary heart disease (syndrome X), 4 had dilatative cardiomyopathy, and one had the long QT syndrome (Romano-Ward syndrome). We found the following recovery rates for ventricular late potentials within the ST segment with the averaging technique: clearcut in 13/53 patients, doubtful in 16/53 patients, and late potentials absent in 26/53 patients. With the beat-to-beat technique the following recovery rates were found: clearcut late potentials in 27/70 patients, doubtful in 23/70 patients, none in 20/70 patients, and intermittently occurring late potentials in 18/70 patients (categorized as doubtful late potentials). When comparing the detection of late potentials with both methods in individual patients, we found concordant results in 39/53 patients studied (positive with both methods in 24/53 patients, negative with both methods in 15/53 patients), and discordant results in 14/53 patients (positive with the beat-to-beat technique and negative with the averaging technique in 12 individuals, negative with the beat-to-beat technique and positive with the averaging technique in the remaining 2 patients). The correlation between the incidence of late potentials and the presence of exercise-induced myocardial ischemia (submaximal bicycle exercise) was higher when using the high resolution beat-to-beat technique, as holds also true for the correlation to complex ventricular arrhythmias.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0160-9289
Volume :
9
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
3731561
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.4960090802