Abstract
BackgroundLeft ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is a common pathophysiological consequence of hypertension. Various voltage (ECG) criteria exist for evaluation of LVH. This study assessed the performance of 4 commonly used ECG criteria in south-western Nigeria. Materials and methodsA cross-sectional descriptive study of adult hypertensive subjects. Participants were assessed for LVH using 4 ECG criteria: Sokolow–Lyon, Araoye code system, Cornell voltage, and Gubner–Ungerleider criteria. Echocardiography was used to determine the left ventricular mass index for the participants, and a value greater than 125 g/m2 was used as the cut-off point for LVH. The sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive and negative predictive values were determined for each of the ECG criteria. Results90 subjects (45 males, 45 females) participated in the study. The prevalence of LVH by echocardiography was 32.2%. The prevalence of LVH by voltage criteria were: 45.6%, 42.2%, 34.4%, 13.3% by Sokolow–Lyon, Araoye code system, Cornell, and Gubner–Ungerleider criteria, respectively. The sensitivity and specificity respectively of the ECG criteria were 58.62% and 60.66% (Sokolow–Lyon), 48.28% and 60.65% (Araoye code system), 51.72% and 73.77% (Cornell), and 13.79% and 86.89% (Gubner–Ungerleider). ConclusionOut of the 4 ECG criteria, Araoye code system, Cornell and Sokolow–Lyon criteria compared favorably well with echocardiography and may be used in the initial assessment of LVH in adult hypertensive subjects. However, a combination of any of the 3 criteria with Gubner–Ungerleider criterion will be more clinically useful.
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