Abstract
BackgroundThe ECG is important in diagnosis and triage in the initial phase of the acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The primary goal of making an ECG at first medical contact should be the reliable detection of cardiac ischemia, thus facilitating a correct triage by corroborating the diagnosis of ACS. Ischemia detection by ST amplitude analysis is limited to situations in which there is an identifiable J point. The ventricular gradient (VG) is independent of conduction and might be an alternative ECG-based variable for ischemia detection. MethodsWe studied vectorcardiograms (VCGs) synthesized of the ECGs of 67 patients who underwent elective PTCA with prolonged balloon occlusions (mean±SD occlusion duration 214±77s), and computed, during occlusions, the changes of the ST and VG vectors with respect to baseline, ΔST and ΔVG, and the angle between these vectors, ∠(ΔST, ΔVG). We then analyzed directionality and proportionality of ΔST and ΔVG by performing linear regressions of ∠(ΔST, ΔVG) on time after occlusion, and of ΔVG on ΔST, respectively. ResultsLinear regression of ∠(ΔST, ΔVG) on time after occlusion yielded a slope of 1.55*10−3 °/s and an intercept of 11.96°; r2<0.001 (NS). Linear regression of ΔVG on ΔST on all data yielded a slope of 253mV and an intercept of 14.4mV•ms; r2=0.75 (P<0.001). Broken stick linear regression (breakpoint ΔST=0.255mV) yielded slopes of 330mV and 160mV, intercepts of 5.6mV•ms and 47.2mV•ms, and r2 values of 0.66 (P<0.001) and 0.63 (P<0.001) for the smaller and larger ΔST values, respectively. ConclusionOur study suggests that, because of the directionality and proportionality between ΔST and ΔVG, the change in the ventricular gradient, ΔVG, between a reference ECG and an ischemic ECG is a meaningful measure of ischemia.
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