Circulation, Vol 66, 212-218, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
Ambulatory arrhythmias in resuscitated victims of cardiac arrest
WD Weaver, LA Cobb and AP Hallstrom
One hundred forty-four patients with coronary heart disease previously
resuscitated from out-of-hospital ventricular fibrillation underwent 24-
hour ambulatory ECG monitoring 5 months (median) after cardiac arrest.
Patients were then followed for an average of 31.7 months. Fifty-one
patients died, 32 from subsequent unexpected cardiac arrest. One hundred
twenty-nine patients (90%) had uniform ventricular ectopy. Two- thirds had
complex ventricular ectopy (Bigeminy/trigeminy, repetitive forms or
frequent multiforms). Complex ectopy, present in 20% or more of the
30-minute recording intervals, occurred in 18 of the patients (56%) who
developed subsequent cardiac arrest, compared with 26 of 92 (28%) who
survived (P less than 0.005, specificity 72%, relative risk 2.3). Other
forms of ventricular ectopy, e.g., uniform, multiform and repetitive beats,
were more sensitive but less specific predictors of death or recurrent
ventricular fibrillation. Complex ventricular ectopy was associated with
certain clinical histories: it occurred in 95% of patients with a history
of congestive heart failure and in 79% with remote myocardial infarction,
compared with 59% and 56% without these histories (p less than 0.001 and p
less than 0.01). As expected, mortality was also greater in patients who
had these clinical characteristics. Complex ectopy was related to mortality
regardless of the clinical history.