A new ECG-amplifier system for recording cardiac microvolt potentials from the body surface is described. The improvement in signal-to-noise ratio was achieved by using specially designed suction electrodes, which were isolated from each other; by applying parallel signal averaging from four electrode pairs via four low-noise amplifiers; and by conducting the registration in Faraday cage. in 14 normal subjects, 12 patients with coronary heart disease and one patient with surgically corrected ventricular septal defect and pulmonary stenosis, pre-P-potentials (possible sinus node activity), His bundle potentials and ventricular late potentials were recorded with differing degrees of success. Variations of the time intervals to the preceding QRS complex were observed within the S-T segment in six of nine patients with demonstrable ventricular late ventricular late potentials. The advantage of such continuously recording ECG system lies in the highly accurate registration of cardiac micropotentials, particularly with ventricular late potentials that are changing in time, whereas the signal-averaging technique does not provide such possibilities.
An automatic, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (AICD) which generates a high-energy current impulse is now available for the management of treatment-resistant malignant ventricular arrhythmias. Such a device (manufactured by Intec/CPI) was implanted into eight patients with coronary heart disease or dilated cardiomyopathy, and in four after surgery for postinfarction ventricular arrhythmias. All patients had had life-threatening episodes of ventricular fibrillation or tachycardia: the arrhythmias were refractory to multiple drug therapy (mean of 6.8 antiarrhythmia drugs per patient). The threshold energy for converting ventricular fibrillation was 9.6 Joules +/- 5.7. Except for one bacterial infection of the electrodes, there were no serious complications. During a mean observation period of 13.6 months 21 electrophysiologically induced and 105 spontaneous tachyarrhythmias were successfully terminated by the AICD. No malfunctions occurred and there was no death due to an arrhythmia.
Para-aortic pseudoaneurysms after prosthetic replacement of an aortic valve was diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in two patients and confirmed at surgery. The abscesses had not been visualized in either case by computed tomography and echocardiography, but in one it had been demonstrated by angiography. MRI can thus precisely define site and extent of a para-aortic pseudoaneurysm after aortic valve replacement without any interference by artefact, noninvasively and without use of contrast media.
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