Circulation, Vol 76, 1290-1297, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
LS Green, RL Lux and CW Haws
Patients with clinically significant coronary artery disease often have
normal resting electrocardiograms. Clinical and experimental studies have
shown that body surface potential maps provide improved recognition of some
disease states and more regionally selective information than standard
electrocardiograms. Body surface maps were recorded at rest from 41
symptomatic patients with angiographically documented coronary artery
disease and normal electrocardiograms. Patient maps were statistically
compared with maps recorded from 644 normal subjects with the use of
previously reported data representation technique. By this technique, maps
from patients with symptomatic coronary artery disease and normal
electrocardiograms were separated from maps of normal subjects with a
sensitivity and specificity greater than 94%. The majority of
discriminating information was present in the QRS interval. Fifteen of the
41 symptomatic patients had documented single-vessel coronary disease and
their maps were separately compared with normal maps. Average maps from
each of three patient groups with single-vessel disease contained abnormal
patterns during the QRS interval that were unique to the vessel affected.
In comparison with a average map from normal subjects, the average map from
the group with left anterior descending coronary disease showed lower
potentials over the anterior and inferolateral thorax during the early to
mid QRS interval, the average map from the circumflex disease group showed
decreased potentials around the entire inferior thorax in the mid to late
QRS interval, and the average map from the right coronary disease group
showed decreased potentials over the right anterior thorax during the mid
to late QRS interval.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Detection and localization of coronary artery disease with body surface mapping in patients with normal electrocardiograms
Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City 84112.
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