Abstract

To determine the incidence and significance of late potentials in patients with mitral valve prolapse, we performed surface signal-averaged electrocardiography and 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring in 41 patients with moderate to severe mitral vaive prolapse on two-dimensional echocardiograms. Late potentials were defined as the presence of either a root mean square voltage of the last 40 msec of the QRS (RMS-40) of less than 20 μv or a low-amplitude signal duration (LAS-40) of greater than 39 msec. Despite the absence of clinically significant ventricular tachycardia by history and on ambulatory ECG monitoring, 12 patients had late potentials on their signal-averaged electrocardiograms. Clinical characteristics could not differentiate patients with from patients without late potentials, and all patients were doing well at a mean follow-up of 34 months except for one noncardiac death. We conclude that late potentials on the surface signal-averaged electrocardiogram are a common and benign finding in patients with mitral valve prolapse and their clinical significance should be determined only in the presence of other findings.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call