Abstract

Electrocardiograms (ECGs) are frequently recorded in primary care for screening purposes. An ECG is essential in diagnosing atrial fibrillation, and ECG abnormalities are associated with cardiovascular events. While recent studies show that ECGs adequately reclassify a proportion of patients based on the clinical risk score calculations, there are no data to support that this also results in improved health outcomes. When applied for screening for atrial fibrillation, more cases are found with routine care, but this would be undone when physicians would perform systematic pulse palpation. In most studies, the harms of routine ECG use (such as unnecessary diagnostic testing, emotional distress, increased health expenses) were poorly documented. As such, the routine performing of ECGs in asymptomatic primary care patients, whether it is for cardiovascular disease risk assessment or atrial fibrillation, cannot be recommended.

Highlights

  • The electrocardiogram (ECG) has become a well-established diagnostic instrument in the field of medicine

  • The rationale for ECG screening is supported by research that shows that ECG abnormalities, such as silentQ-wave-infarctions, ST-segment and T-wave changes, left ventricular hypertrophy, and bundle branch blocks, are independently associated with future cardiovascular events and death, with hazard ratios ranging from 1.5 to 2.5 (Brown et al 2000; Healy et al 2016; Van der Ende et al 2017)

  • De Lemos et al published the findings of a combined multi-modality risk assessment from two US-based population cohorts. They authors found that the ECG finding of left ventricular hypertrophy was one of the predictors that attributed to an improved clinical prediction score that led to reclassification of intermediate risk patients

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Summary

Short Report

Cite this article: Harskamp RE. (2019) Electrocardiographic screening in primary care for cardiovascular disease risk and atrial fibrillation. (2019) Electrocardiographic screening in primary care for cardiovascular disease risk and atrial fibrillation. Primary Health Care Research & Development 20(e101): 1–3.

Introduction
Integration of ECG to improve cardiovascular risk assessment
Adults at intermediate or high risk of CVD events
Screening for AF
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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