American heart journal
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American heart journal · Jul 1992
Prolonged QT interval in neonates: benign, transient, or prolonged risk of sudden death.
To determine the factors relating to prognosis, the records of 15 neonates with persistent prolongation of the QT interval on the electrocardiogram after the fourth day of life were reviewed. Patients were admitted for symptoms (syncope, cardiac failure, or seizures), abnormal auscultation with an irregular heart rate or bradycardia, or because of a family history of a long QT syndrome. All infants had a long QTc, ranging from 0.46 to more than 0.70 second. ⋯ Six children are still being treated with beta-blocking agents for the long QT syndrome and are doing well. In five infants, electrocardiographic abnormalities were transient and the QT interval returned to normal within 1 year. Therefore (1) prolongation of the QT interval in neonates may be transient or may represent an early form of the long QT syndrome and (2) the length of the QT interval may provide data on prognosis: those with a QTc less than 0.50 second returned to normal; those with a QTc greater than 0.60 second were associated with severe arrhythmias and four of eight infants died.
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American heart journal · May 1992
Comparative StudyFocal myocardial injury following blunt chest trauma: a comparison of indium-111 antimyosin scintigraphy with other noninvasive methods.
The diagnosis of myocardial contusion is often difficult, as traditional methods such as serial electrocardiograms, cardiac enzyme (creatine kinase [CK-MB]) analysis, and echocardiography lack sensitivity and specificity. Recent reports have shown that 111In labelled antimyosin scanning has high sensitivity for detecting cardiac injury. However, no prior studies have been reported for antimyosin imaging with patients suspected of sustaining a cardiac contusion. ⋯ Thus in patients with suspected myocardial contusion, echocardiography is frequently limited technically and the electrocardiogram and CK analysis appear to lack diagnostic accuracy. In contrast, monoclonal antimyosin imaging may be performed in patients with trauma without limitation and yields results that are concordant with echocardiograms. In patients with suspected myocardial contusion, focal antimyosin uptake is uncommon despite severe thoracic injury, which suggests that extensive myocardial necrosis is not the primary method of injury.
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American heart journal · Apr 1992
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical TrialRelative importance of emergency medical system transport and the prehospital electrocardiogram on reducing hospital time delay to therapy for acute myocardial infarction: a preliminary report from the Cincinnati Heart Project.
Substantial time delays from symptom onset to diagnosis and treatment of patients with acute myocardial infarction have been demonstrated. To determine the relative importance of prehospital mode of patient transport and the relative impact of emergency medical system transport with or without a prehospital cellular electrocardiogram (ECG) on hospital time delays to initiation of thrombolytic therapy, four prospective parallel groups of patients with acute myocardial infarction were evaluated. ⋯ Specialized emergency medical system transport alone did not facilitate in-hospital initiation of thrombolytic therapy in patients with acute myocardial infarction when compared with those brought by local ambulance or by private automobile. A significant reduction in hospital time delay to treatment was observed only in patients transported by the emergency medical system who had cellular transmission of a prehospital 12-lead ECG from the field.