Journal of electrocardiology
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Controlled Clinical Trial
Transtelephonic electrocardiography in the management of patients with acute coronary syndrome.
The efficacy of the transtelephonic ECG system (TTECG) in the management of ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) was examined with regard to the ambulance service- and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)-related delay times, the prehospital medical therapy and the in-hospital mortality rate. ⋯ The findings illustrate that TTECG is a valuable tool which may potentially improve the regional management of STEMI patients.
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Digitized electrocardiography permits the rapid, automated quantification of electrocardiograms (ECGs) for analysis. Community- and population-based studies have increasingly integrated such data. Assessing the reproducibility of automated ECG measures with manual measures is a critical step in preparation for using automated measures for research purposes. We recently established an ECG repository of digitally recorded ECGs for the Framingham Heart Study and we sought to assess the reproducibility of automated and manual measures. ⋯ The interrater reproducibility findings for P wave amplitude, PR interval, QT interval, QRS duration, and R wave amplitude were excellent. In contrast, the reproducibility of P wave duration was more modest. These findings indicate high reproducibility of most automated and manual ECG measurements.
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The ECG characteristics of premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) in subjects with Brugada syndrome (BrS) phenotype were investigated. ⋯ PVCs in BrS usually originate from the RVOT and display specific ECG characteristics that might be indicative of an epicardial origin. The prolonged interval criteria may be related to a localized epicardial conduction delay.