British medical journal
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Bundle-branch block was present in 41 out of 415 patients admitted to a coronary care unit with acute myocardial infarction and was associated with more severe clinical infarction and an overall mortality of 56%. It is probable that permanent bundle-branch block develops soon after infarction and that most of the patients with permanent block have had clinically severe infarction. ⋯ Analysis of the arrhythmias and clinical course of the patients suggests that those with bundle-branch block and shock and those in whom bundle-branch block is present on admission may benefit from the use of a demand pacemaker attached to a transvenous pacemaker catheter, though the dividends of pacing may be small and the risks of the procedure significant. Post-mortem examination of 17 hearts showed extensive infarction, usually involving the septum, and severe coronary artery disease.