“…Mass reproduce only with permission from Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Table 1 had a QRS interval greater than 120 ms, cardiomyopathy, or left ventricular hypertrophy (ie, conditions that can cause notches and slurs in the conventional QRS and therefore possible RAZ formation even in the absence of CAD 14,29 ) or arterial collaterals of grade 2 or higher to a singularly diseased culprit vessel at catheterization, a pacemaker, right axis deviation, persistent arrhythmia, or preexcitation syndrome. Using the same statistical analysis noted previously and considering only patients with no prior MI, the incidence of all 3 types of RAZs was significantly increased in patients with (vs without) critical stenoses at catheterization (1-sided P values for the test of no mean increase were .04, .004, and .004 for the RAZ Ns, RAZ APs, and RAZ As, respectively).…”