Title of article :
Frequency of Serious Arrhythmias Detected With Ambulatory Cardiac Telemetry
Author/Authors :
Kadish، نويسنده , , Alan H. and Reiffel، نويسنده , , James A. and Clauser، نويسنده , , Joseph and Prater، نويسنده , , Stephen and Menard، نويسنده , , Marikay and Kopelman، نويسنده , , Harry، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
4
From page :
1313
To page :
1316
Abstract :
Ambulatory cardiac telemetry has been shown to be effective in establishing diagnoses in patients with suspected arrhythmias. A critical component of ambulatory telemetry is the immediate transfer of rhythm information to a central monitoring station without requiring patient action. The frequency with which potentially life-threatening events are detected using ambulatory telemetry has not previously been evaluated in a large patient population. All patients (n = 26,438) who underwent monitoring from April to December 2008 at a single service provider formed the patient population of this study. Arrhythmic events noted in these patients were defined as those requiring physician notification and those that represented potentially life-threatening arrhythmias. Of the 26,438 patients included in the study, 5,459 (21%) had arrhythmic events meeting physician notification criteria during a mean monitoring period of 21 days. Of these, 262 patients (1%) had arrhythmic events that could potentially be classified as emergent. These included 120 patients with wide complex tachycardia ≥15 beats at ≥120 beats/min, 100 patients with pauses ≥6 seconds, and 42 patients with sustained heart rates <30 beats/min. An additional 704 patients (3%) had narrow complex tachycardia ≥180 beats/min at rest. In conclusion, approximately 1% of patients who underwent ambulatory telemetry for routine clinical indications experienced life-threatening arrhythmic events over a 3-week monitoring period. Ambulatory cardiac telemetry could be potentially lifesaving in this group of patients.
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Record number :
1899236
Link To Document :
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