Late potentials in normal subjects and in patients with ventricular tachycardia unrelated to myocardial infarction
1985; Elsevier BV; Volume: 55; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/0002-9149(85)90381-9
ISSN1879-1913
AutoresHumberto Coto, Claudio Maldonado, Prasad R. Palakurthy, Nancy C. Flowers,
Tópico(s)ECG Monitoring and Analysis
ResumoFifty normal male and female athletes, or athletically active subjects, were evaluated, and a search for low-amplitude late potentials in the terminal part of ventricular activation was performed. Recordings from 3 normal men met the definition of abnormal late potentials, and were indistinguishable by present analytic techniques from those encountered in patients who have ventricular tachycardia (VT) after myocardial infarction (MI). Of 24 patients studied, 11 had VT, but only 2 had had an MI, which occurred in the remote past. Another patient had 1 narrowed coronary artery on arteriography. Group differences could be demonstrated using amplitudes and durations of late potentials, but late potentials generally did not prove the impressive marker of the patient with VT, which other workers, as well as ourselves, have encountered in patients after MI. Late potentials were an impressive marker in a subset of the VT group in whom cardiomegaly developed. Thus, the absence of late potentials is an effective marker in the normal subject, but the presence of late potentials is not an effective marker in identifying the patient with non-MI-related, nonsustained VT before development of cardiomegaly.
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