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- C Heim, A Geel, T Münzer, W Angehrn, H Roelli, and H Niederhauser.
- Institut für Anästhesiologie, Kantonsspital St. Gallen.
- Anaesthesist. 1996 Mar 1; 45 (3): 220-4.
UnlabelledPerioperative, mostly silent ischaemia in patients with coronary heart disease is difficult to detect by clinical examinations.MethodsDuring the clinical evaluation (part I of this study) we monitored patients with prior myocardial infarction (MI) by continuous electrocardiographic (ECG) recording from the evening before until the first 24 h after operation. Excluded from Holter ECG studies were patients with a bundle branch block, pacemaker, valvular heart disease, cardiomyopathy, severe hypokalaemia, and digitalis treatment. Data were recorded with a Holter 8500 recorder (Marquette Electronics) using modified V2, V4, and V5 leads (Fig. 1). Holter tapes were analysed twice with a Holter computing system (Software 5.8, Marquette Electronics), first by a blinded technician and then by the authors themselves. We defined the following criteria as pathological ST segment changes and as ischaemic episodes [7]: horizontal or down-sloping ST depression of at least 1 mm or elevation of 2 mm of at least 1 min duration measured at the J-point plus 60 ms. To quantify individual levels of ischaemia we used the definition "ischaemic load" [3]: ischaemic min/h monitored per patient. The statistic evaluation did not differ from that used in part I.ResultsOut of 160 patients, 100 could be examined by Holter monitoring. Because of technical problems we could not record a Holter ECG in 2 of 6 patients with reinfarction. We found one or more perioperative episodes of ST-segment depression in 25 patients (25%). Ischaemic episodes were detected in 15 patients preoperatively, in 12 intraoperatively, and in 10 postoperatively. Three patients had ischaemic episodes during all periods. Patients with pathological ST segments suffered significantly more reinfarctions (3 of 25 vs. 1 of 75 patients) and were older (mean age difference 7 years, P < 0.05). Patients with ischaemic episodes and a clinical diagnosis of reinfarction (n = 3) demonstrated a dramatic postoperative increase in ischaemic load. Preoperative use of beta-blocking agents did not influence the incidence of ischaemic events. The sensitivity of postoperative Holter ECG monitoring in the diagnosis of reinfarction was 50%, the specificity 92%.ConclusionsPerioperative Holter ECG monitoring is time-consuming, expensive, not very sensitive, and therefore not generally applicable for all patients with prior MI.
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