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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was to systematically evaluate programmed ventricular stimulation in patients less than 21 years of age undergoing electrophysiologic testing. A standardized protocol was applied in 55 consecutive patients (mean age 14 years) with the following clinical presentations: sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) (n = 17); ventricular fibrillation (VF) (n = 7);
syncope
with
heart disease
(n = 10); nonsustained VT (n = 6); and
syncope
with an ostensibly normal heart (n = 15). The stimulation protocol consisted of 1 and 2 ventricular extrastimuli during sinus rhythm, followed by 1 to 4 (S2, S3, S4, S5) extrastimuli during pacing at 2 ventricular sites. Of the 17 patients with sustained VT, 12 had induction of the arrhythmia (sensitivity = 71%). Overall, 18 of 55 patients had inducible sustained VT, with this response significantly enhanced by use of S4 or S5 protocols (p = 0.02). Although no
syncope
patients with an ostensibly normal heart had inducible sustained VT, 7 had polymorphic nonsustained VT in response to ventricular stimulation. The mean number of extra-stimuli preceding the induction of nonsustained or sustained VT or VF did not differ. The induction of VF in 5 cases during this study was preceded in each case by extrastimuli intervals less than or equal to 190 ms. Thus, data indicate that aggressive stimulation protocols appear to be required for induction of sustained VT in most young patients, nonsustained polymorphic VT as a response to aggressive programmed stimulation is of uncertain significance, and that coupling intervals less than or equal to 190 ms may correlate with the induction of VF.
...
PMID:Analysis of programmed stimulation methods in the evaluation of ventricular arrhythmias in patients 20 years old and younger. 222 May 80
The feasibility of outpatient electrophysiologic testing was examined by reviewing 100 consecutive outpatient tests performed in 95 patients. Seventy-one of the patients (75%) had no underlying
heart disease
. The electrophysiologic tests were performed to evaluate supraventricular tachycardias (n = 47), nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (n = 20), unexplained
syncope
(n = 21), palpitation (n = 9) or intermittent heart block (n = 2). A mean of 2.8 +/- 0.5 6F electrode catheters were inserted through a femoral vein. An electrode catheter was inserted into a subclavian or internal jugular vein in 28 tests and a 5F cannula was inserted into a femoral artery to monitor the blood pressure in 20 tests. The results of 61 tests (61%) were abnormal. Patients were monitored for a mean of 3.8 +/- 1.2 h after the procedure and then discharged. No complications occurred. For cost analysis a subgroup of 60 of these patients was matched for age, gender,
heart disease
and indication for electrophysiologic testing with a group of 60 patients who underwent electrophysiologic testing as inpatients. Physicians' fees for the two groups were similar; however, the mean hospital charge was $5,845 +/- 3,763 for the inpatient group compared with only $2,120 +/- 1,244 for the outpatient group (p less than 0.001). Thus, outpatient electrophysiologic testing is feasible and safe and results in substantial cost savings in patients without life-threatening arrhythmias.
...
PMID:Feasibility and cost savings of outpatient electrophysiologic testing. 222 94
Programmed ventricular stimulation with up to 3 extrastimuli at the right ventricular apex was performed in 52 patients with spontaneous nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) associated with coronary artery disease. There were 44 men and 8 women, aged 66 +/- 9 years (range 45 to 86). The mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 41 +/- 14%. Nonsustained VT was asymptomatic in 10 patients (19%), while the arrhythmia was detected during evaluation of palpitations in 5 patients (10%), presyncope in 11 (21%) and
syncope
in 26 patients (50%). All patients were tested in the drug-free state and were classified as having no inducible arrhythmia (31 patients, group I), or an inducible arrhythmia (21 patients, group II). The age, gender, type of
heart disease
, symptoms and left ventricular ejection fraction were similar in both groups. Group I patients had a higher overall incidence of
syncope
. Group I patients received no therapy, while group II patients received antiarrhythmic therapy guided by electropharmacologic testing. At 21 +/- 17 months there was no sustained VT in either group. There were 3 deaths in group I patients, including 1 sudden, 1 nonsudden cardiac and 1 noncardiac death. In group II patients 6 deaths occurred including 4 nonsudden cardiac and 2 noncardiac deaths. In patients with nonsustained VT and coronary artery disease undergoing programmed ventricular stimulation, the incidence of significant arrhythmic events is low in those without therapy with no inducible arrhythmia, and in those with an inducible arrhythmia with therapy guided by electrophysiologic testing.
...
PMID:Value of programmed ventricular stimulation in the evaluation and management of patients with nonsustained ventricular tachycardia associated with coronary artery disease. 229 89
Out-of-hospital ventricular tachyarrhythmia has a high mortality. Most patients sustaining this type of arrhythmia have an organic
heart disease
. In this case report we present a patient with recurrent ventricular fibrillation with the clinical appearance of
syncope
, where no relevant organic
heart disease
could be found at autopsy performed 40 years later.
...
PMID:Self-terminating idiopathic ventricular fibrillation presenting as syncope: a 40-year follow-up report. 231 29
Coronary spasm provocation by intracoronary methylergonovine was performed in 14 patients (8 men and 6 women, mean age 56 +/- 6 years) with
syncope
that remained unexplained despite neurologic and noninvasive cardiac evaluations. Electrophysiologic testing was also performed in 6 of 14 patients. No patient had structural
heart disease
or significant fixed stenosis of greater than or equal to 75% in the coronary arteries. Six patients had no history of chest pain even when they developed
syncope
. Serious arrhythmia was documented in 2 patients, cardiac standstill in 1 and complete atrioventricular block in the other. Coronary spasm was induced in 9 patients using the methylergonovine provocation test. Multivessel spasms were found in 3 patients. Coronary spasm was induced in the artery supplying the inferior wall in 7 of 9 patients with positive results. In 4 of 9 patients who had a positive result, there was no prior history of chest pain. In 1 patient, whose electrocardiogram was recorded during
syncope
, cardiac standstill was documented and cardiac standstill and
syncope
also occurred during the provocation test. Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia was not induced by the electrophysiologic study. These results suggest that coronary spasm is involved in unexplained
syncope
.
...
PMID:Possible role of coronary artery spasm in unexplained syncope. 231 52
To determine the incremental yield of ambulatory monitoring in the evaluation of
syncope
, three serial 24-hour Holter recordings were obtained in a consecutive series of 95 patients with
syncope
, the cause of which was not explained by history, physical examination, or 12-lead electrocardiogram. The mean age of patients was 61 years and 41% were men. Major electrocardiographic abnormalities were found in 26 patients (27%), including unsustained ventricular tachycardia (19 patients), pauses of at least 2 seconds (8 patients), profound bradycardia (1 patient), and complete heart block (1 patient). The first 24-hour Holter recording had at least one major abnormality in 14 patients (15%) (95% confidence interval, 8.3% to 23.4%). Of the 81 patients without a major abnormality on the first Holter recording, the second Holter recording had major abnormalities in 9 (11%) (95% confidence interval, 5.1% to 20.0%). Of the 72 patients without a major abnormality on the first two Holter recordings, only 3 patients (4.2%) had a major abnormality on the third Holter recording (95% confidence interval, 0.8% to 11.7%). Four factors were significantly associated with an increased likelihood of a major abnormality on 72 hours of monitoring: age above 65 years (relative risk, 2.2), male gender (relative risk, 2.0), history of
heart disease
(relative risk, 2.2), and an initial nonsinus rhythm (relative risk, 3.5). These results suggest that 24 hours of Holter monitoring is not enough to identify all potentially important arrhythmias in patients with
syncope
. Monitoring may need to be extended to 48 hours if the first 24-hour Holter recording is normal.
...
PMID:The duration of Holter monitoring in patients with syncope. Is 24 hours enough? 233 Nov 88
Clinical, laboratory and electrocardiographic data from 608 patients with permanent pacemakers implanted over a period of 8 years, were evaluated retrospectively. The number of implants was greater in males (56.5%) and in patients over 60 years of age (77.5%). Atherosclerosis was the most common disease found in this group (50%).
Syncope
occurred in 96.2% of the cases; and complete AV block was the most common electrocardiographic alteration (50.5%). Electrode displacement occurred in 32 patients (5.2%) and was the most commonly found early complication. Among the late complications, 10.3% of the patients had infections in the area of the generator. The total mortality was 7.7% due to the
heart disease
rather than pacemaker-related complication.
...
PMID:[Permanent pacemaker implantation. Indications and results]. 234 27
Thirty-five patients with bundle branch block (BBB) and unexplained
syncope
underwent electrophysiologic study (EPS) including programmed ventricular stimulation and ajmaline administration (1 mg/kg, IV) to induce infra-His block. A prolonged HV interval (greater than 55 ms) was present in 16 of the 35 patients. Ajmaline-induced HV block occurred in 12 patients (complete HV block in 10, and 2:1 HV block in two). Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT) was inducible in nine (25.7%) and polymorphic VT in two patients (5.7%). Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was less than 40% in five patients (45.5%) with inducible VT. Two patients had an unexpected co-existence of inducible HV block and VT. The remaining 14 patients (40%) had no detectable abnormality. The incidence of inducible VT was higher (45% vs 13.3%), and the presence of negative studies was lower (30% vs 53.3%) in patients with structural
heart disease
(n = 20), when compared to those with no significant
heart disease
(n = 15) (differences not significant [NS]). During a mean follow-up period of 16.5 +/- 9.2 months, all the patients with inducible HV block have been asymptomatic after having received permanent pacemakers. Patients with inducible monomorphic VT (except one with poor left ventricular function who died suddenly) have also been asymptomatic on antiarrhythmic drugs. Of the remaining patients, seven with normal EPS, two with prolonged HV intervals but no inducible HV block (despite being given permanent pacemakers) and one patient with polymorphic VT on antiarrhythmic drugs continue to have recurrent
syncope
. Approximately 60% of patients with BBB and unexplained
syncope
have clinically significant electrophysiologic abnormalities.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Evaluation of patients with bundle branch block and "unexplained" syncope: a study based on comprehensive electrophysiologic testing and ajmaline stress. 245 15
Catheter electrical ablation of ventricular tachycardia (VT) was attempted in 31 patients (57 +/- 15 years) who had refractory recurrent VT. Fifteen patients had coronary artery disease, seven had arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia, four had cardiomyopathy and five had no structural
heart disease
. Ten patients were NYHA class III-IV. Ten patients experienced cardiac arrest or
syncope
during VT. Twenty-two patients had only one documented morphologic type of spontaneous VT. Whereas nine patients had more than one: the VT was incessant or daily in 17 patients. One to 16 shocks (mean 5.6) of 160 to 240 joules each (1162 +/- 1060 joules) were delivered to the endocardial exit site of VT--as identified by endocardial activation mapping (29 patients) and pacemapping (31 patients)--during one (22 patients) or more than one session (nine patients). Cumulative delivered energy was 840 +/- 558 joules for right ventricular VT (11 patients) and 1362 +/- 1240 joules for left ventricular VT (20 patients). Reversible side effects occurring immediately after shocks included: nonclinical VT (two patients), ventricular fibrillation (two patients), AV block (three patients). Mean CK-MB fraction 6 hours after shocks was 91 +/- 46 IU/1. An electrophysiology study performed 7 to 10 days later demonstrated that the original clinical VT was inducible in seven patients, nonclinical monomorphic VT was inducible in eight patients and no VT was inducible in 13 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fulguration of ventricular tachycardia using high cumulative energy: results in thirty-one patients with a mean follow-up of twenty-seven months. 246 59
A 51-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital for further elucidation of a
syncope
of unknown origin and exercise-induced tachycardias with broad QRS-complex. The tachycardia was induced by bicycle exercise stress testing, had a frequency of 165/min, showed an inferior axis and left bundle branch block. Organic
heart disease
was excluded by right and left heart catheterization and selective coronary angiography. A nodoventricular bundle or an atrio-ventricular bundle was excluded by an extensive electrophysiologic study, therefore the documented tachycardia was probably of ventricular origin. However, it was not possible to induce a ventricular tachycardia by programmed ventricular stimulation with up to three extrastimuli even after the infusion of isoprenaline. Sotalol (2 x 160 mg/die) and the combined treatment with mexiletine (2 x 360 mg/die) and disopyramide (2 x 250 mg/die) did not prevent the induction of the tachycardia by exercise testing. The combination of sotalol and flecainide (2 x 100 mg/die) evoked complex ventricular arrhythmias at rest not noted before, and it was therefore withdrawn as well. After all antiarrhythmic drugs were withdrawn verapamil was given in a dose of 3 x 120 mg and this therapy reproduceably prevented the induction of ventricular tachycardia by exercise testing.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of stress-induced therapy refractory ventricular tachycardia with verapamil]. 247 23
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