Circulation, Vol 63, 1172-1178, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
JJ Rozanski, D Mortara, RJ Myerburg and A Castellanos
In eight patients with chronic ventricular tachycardia and left ventricular
aneurysms, we detected delayed ECG wave forms after the QRS complex from
the body surface using a high-resolution ECG recorder, amplification and
signal averaging. Delayed wave-form activity (D wave) extended a mean of 70
msec beyond the termination of th QRS complex. This delayed activity
frequently extended to the limit of the recording window, and may thus
continue throughout much of diastole. Antiarrhythmic agents never abolished
the delayed activity; however, it was abolished by aneurysmectomy in four
patients. Ventricular tachycardia did not recur after surgery in the four
patients during a mean follow-up of 1 year. The D wave was not found in
eight control patients who had chronic recurrent ventricular tachycardia
nor in 11 of 12 who had aneurysms alone. The surface D wave can be readily
and reproducibly detected by high-resolution electrocardiography and
appears to be specific for patients with left ventricular aneurysms who
also have chronic recurrent ventricular tachycardia. This delayed wave-
form activity has been noted during catheter and surgical endocardial and
epicardial mapping. It may represent persistence of the cardiac impulse in
islands of myocardium and may be a manifestation of the delayed and
fractionated activity, noted by previous investigators.
ARTICLES
Body surface detection of delayed depolarizations in patients with recurrent ventricular tachycardia and left ventricular aneurysm
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