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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Holter electrocardiographic monitoring in 55 symptomatic patients with syncope, palpitations or dizziness uncovered significant arrhythmias in 30 patients (55 percent). By providing an observation period of at least 24 hours including a period of sleep, the procedure aided detection and diagnosis in both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients of transient arrhythmias or conduction abnormalities not documented by routine electrocardiograms. Bradyarrhythmias accounted for the majority of arrhythmias recorded in 21 or 30 symptomatic patients (70 percent); 15 had sinus bradycardia (35 to 55 beats/min) alone and 6 also had long episodes of sinus arrest of up to 5 seconds. Two had sinus bradycardia with periods of atrioventricular block with Wenckebach phenomenon. Five patients had a tachycardia-bradycardia syndrome; three had other episodic arrhythmias and one had pacemaker failure. In 15 (60 percent) of the 25 patients without arrhythmias, monitoring did not document the cause of symptoms. Holter monitoring is of considerable value in assessing the efficacy and adequacy of drug treatment, especially in patients with known heart disease, and in detecting pacemaker malfunction. However, very long periods of monitoring may be needed to make a diagnosis in those with only sporadic symptoms.
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PMID:Value of Holter monitoring in assessing cardiac arrhythmias in symptomatic patients. 124 26

The incidence of autoantibodies against human conducting tissue was studied in 45 pacemaker patients with sick sinus syndrome (SSS), in 17 patients with bradyarrhythmia, and five patients with hypersensitive carotid sinus syndrome. Antibodies against the human sinus node were demonstrated in 29% of patients with SSS and in 24% of patients with bradyarrhythmia; a tenfold risk of SSS could be calculated in patients with this antibody as compared to age-matched controls. At least two subtypes of anti-sinus node antibodies were demonstrated: an antibody absorbable and another one not absorbable with ventricular myocardium. Patients with SSS and prior myocarditis of rheumatic fever have a threefold incidence of that antibody, demonstrating that anti-conducting tissue antibodies are etiologic indicators for former inflammatory heart disease. These antibodies may play a role in the secondary immunopathogenesis of sick sinus syndrome. This hypothesis emerges as an interesting new pathogenetic concept.
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PMID:Antibodies to human sinus node in sick sinus syndrome. 243 16

Although electrophysiologic testing accurately delineates abnormalities in patients with fixed cardiac-conduction defects, its sensitivity in identifying transient rhythm disturbances is unknown. We prospectively studied 21 patients who had electrocardiographically documented intermittent atrioventricular block (n = 13) or sinus pauses (n = 8) causing syncope, but whose cardiac rhythm had reverted to normal by the time of referral. There were 14 men and 7 women, with a mean age (+/- SD) of 63 +/- 13 years. Fourteen patients had organic heart disease, and 8 were taking cardioactive medications. Electrophysiologic testing was performed before the implantation of a permanent pacemaker. Only three of the eight patients with documented sinus pauses had abnormalities during their tests that suggested the correct diagnosis (sensitivity, 37.5 percent), including a prolonged sinus-node recovery time in one and carotid-sinus hypersensitivity in two. Three of the eight patients had abnormalities detected that were unrelated to syncope, including atrial flutter, dual atrioventricular nodal pathways, and sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia. Of the 13 patients with documented atrioventricular block, only 2 had abnormalities suggesting the correct diagnosis (sensitivity, 15.4 percent). Additional observations unrelated to syncope among these 13 patients included abnormal sinus-node function, atrial flutter, and atrial fibrillation causing hypotension. These preliminary observations suggest that a negative electrophysiologic test in a patient with a normal cardiac rhythm who has experienced syncope does not exclude a transient bradyarrhythmia as a cause of the syncope. Furthermore, electrophysiologic testing may sometimes reveal unrelated rhythm disturbances that may mistakenly be designated as the cause of the syncope.
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PMID:The diagnostic sensitivity of electrophysiologic testing in patients with syncope caused by transient bradycardia. 232 41

The results of Holter monitoring in 100 patients with transient and focal cerebral ischemia were studied retrospectively. Atrial fibrillation (AF) was found in five patients compared with two from a group of 100 age and sex-matched control patients. Four of these had a previous history of AF or showed AF on the standard electrocardiogram. Episodic forms of sick sinus syndrome, which have also been related to cerebral embolism, were found in 32 of the TIA patients against 13 of the controls (p less than 0.0025). Sick sinus syndrome was of the bradyarrhythmia-tachyarrhythmia type in 14 of the TIA patients and in three of the controls (p less than 0.01). The relationship between TIAs and transient sinus node dysfunction could not be explained by concomitant heart disease. It is not yet clear whether the relationship is causal or indirect.
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PMID:Holter monitoring in patients with transient and focal ischemic attacks of the brain. 293 8

To obtain information on the cardiac rhythm characteristics of subjects without heart disease during their daily work, we examined the continuous 24-hour electrocardiographic recordings of 400 workers from 4 factories in Eastern France presenting with criteria of cardiac normality. Sex, age and socio-professional category were taken into account. Supraventricular extrasystoles were extremely common, being observed in 52 p. 100 of men and 39 p. 100 of women. In men, the frequency of these extrasystoles increased with age (p less than 0.001), and their number was less than 20 per 24 hours in 90 p. 100 of the cases. Ventricular extrasystoles were detected in 40 p. 100 of men and 32 p. 100 of women. They too were age-related, though not significantly. Their number was less than 10 per 24 hours in 68 p. 100 of the cases and 10 to 50 per 24 hours in 28 p. 100. These ventricular extrasystoles usually were monomorphous, regularly coupled (92 p. 100) and isolated. However, 2 attacks of tachycardia were discovered. Episodes of bradyarrhythmia (RR superior or equal to 1500 ms) were present in 25 p. 100 of men and 19 p. 100 of women. They occurred more frequently before the age of 35 than later (p less than 0.001) and the recordings confirmed that they were predominantly nocturnal. Recordings without "disorders of rhythm" were relatively rare (20 p. 100 of men, 28.5 p. 100 of women). Finally, there was no clear-cut correlation between the prevalence or characteristics of these various "rhythmic abnormalities" and the type of professional activity.
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PMID:[Cardiac arrhythmia observed in 400 workers without obvious heart disease by Holter monitoring]. 314 28

The preimplantation arrhythmias, coexistent medical conditions, the causes of death, and survival course are described for 399 patients who received their initial ventricular pacemaker implantation for a bradyarrhythmia (AV block, sinus node disease, and hypersensitive carotid sinus syndrome) at the University of Michigan from 1961 to 1979. Factors which correlated with a poor survival are elucidated. Survival for those with sinus node disease was virtually identical to those with AV block, with only 63% surviving over five years. Advanced age and congestive heart failure prior to implantation, and underlying ischemic or hypertensive heart disease portended a poorer survival in both groups. Patients with hypersensitive carotid sinus syndrome had a distinctly better prognosis--no deaths occurred until the eight year after pacing. Patients with no underlying heart disease and those with valvular disease did remarkably better than those with an ischemic or myopathic etiology. Apparent progression or complications of the underlying heart disease was the major cause of mortality. Sudden death, congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, and major arrhythmias were the causes of death in 48% of those who died. Implications of improved pacing modalities on late complications and death are discussed.
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PMID:Symptomatic bradyarrhythmias in the adult: natural history following ventricular pacemaker implantation. 617 56

Three patients are described who had situs ambiguus and left isomerism (polysplenia syndrome) and advanced atrioventricular block. One presented with a complex bradyarrhythmia with Wenckebach block. The other two had congenital atrioventricular block with a narrow QRS at a ventricular rate of 80 per minute, an atrial rate of 150' per minute, and both had a P wave axis directed superiorly and to the right in one, and superiorly to the left in the other. This ECG pattern was not observed in more than 400 adult patients with complete A-V block treated in our service. It is our opinion that in infants and children with heart disease the presence of complete A-V block with narrow QRS and an unusual P waves axis directed superiorly is strongly suggestive of left isomerism. The incidence rate of complete A-V block in left isomerism is nearly twenty percent of the cases described.
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PMID:Atrioventricular block in situs ambiguus and left isomerism (polysplenia syndrome). 619 63

To determine the cardiac rhythm disturbances underlying sudden death, 15 patients (14 inpatients and 1 outpatient) who had cardiac arrest unexpectedly while undergoing ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring were identified. Heart disease was present in 11 patients and 7 patients were admitted to the hospital with chest pain before sudden cardiac death occurred. The terminal event at the time of cardiac arrest in 3 (20%) of the 15 patients was a bradyarrhythmia expressed as complete heart block; none survived. A ventricular tachyarrhythmia was the precursor of sudden cardiac death in the remaining 12 patients (80%). Two of these 12 had slow ventricular tachycardia and both died. Five had polymorphous ventricular tachycardia associated with prolonged QT interval (torsade de pointes) and three were receiving a class I antiarrhythmic agent. This rhythm degenerated into ventricular fibrillation in one patient; four of the five patients survived after electrical cardioversion. One patient had ventricular tachycardia followed by asystole. Four patients had ventricular flutter (rate greater than 250/min) that degenerated into ventricular fibrillation in each case; only one of these four patients survived after cardioversion. Frequent (greater than 30/h) premature ventricular complexes were present in 9 of 10 patients with ventricular tachycardia or flutter and R on T phenomenon was seen in only 1 patient. In conclusion, a ventricular tachyarrhythmia is usually found on Holter monitoring during sudden cardiac death in hospitalized patients; torsade de pointes (polymorphous ventricular tachycardia) is a frequent cause of sudden death in these patients. Ventricular fibrillation is always preceded by ventricular tachycardia or ventricular flutter.
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PMID:Sudden death in hospitalized patients: cardiac rhythm disturbances detected by ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring. 663 Jul 60

The pathologic substrate for sudden death in the middle-aged or elderly adult is usually ischemic heart disease. In contrast, few data are available regarding the pathology of sudden death in teenagers. This report describes three teenagers without clinically suspected heart disease dying suddenly. Patient 1 (age 15, male) was known to have right ventricular premature ventricular beats. Postmortem examination revealed marked premature aging, sclerosis of the cardiac skeleton extending to the right side of the summit with fibrosis of the left and right bundle branches. Patient 2 (age 17, male) was a trained athlete who died during football scrimmage. Autopsy revealed moderate mitral valve prolapse and marked premature aging, sclerosis of the left side of the cardiac skeleton, which extended to the right ventricular side, and secondary involvement of the trifascicular conduction system with mononuclear cell infiltration. Patient 3 (age 19, female) died suddenly at home. Autopsy revealed mitral valve prolapse, thrombosis of the sinoatrial (SA) node artery, and premature aging, sclerosis of the left side of the cardiac skeleton, with involvement of the ventricular septum more on the right ventricular side and involvement of the atrioventricular bundle and trifascicular conduction system. In conclusion, unexpected deaths in three teenagers occurred with demonstrable pathologic findings in the heart. Two of the three patients had mitral valve prolapse, one of whom also had thrombosis or embolism of the sinoatrial node artery. All three had sclerosis of not only the left side but also the right side of the ventricular septum with involvement of the conduction system. The anatomic substrate demonstrated in these three patients could relate to lethal bradyarrhythmia or tachyarrhythmia, or both.
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PMID:Sudden death in three teenagers: conduction system studies. 682 76

Chronic bundle branch block is common and is a marker for associated heart disease. In the asymptomatic patient no diagnostic studies or treatment are required. In the patient with symptoms suggestive of a bradyarrhythmia, attempts to document complete heart block should be made and if this rhythm is demonstrated a permanent pacemaker should be inserted. If no arrhythmia is documented, close clinical follow-up is warranted but insertion of a permanent pacemaker has not been shown to be useful in preventing symptoms or prolonging life.
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PMID:Prognosis in bundle branch block. 701 85


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