Abstract

The results of ambulatory ECG monitoring are described in a group of patients that have not previously been characterized. Fifty men who were initially seen for elective CABG surgery underwent 48 hours of continuous ambulatory ECG monitoring. ST segment deviation from baseline, trended every 15 seconds, was quantified for duration, maximum ST segment change, area under the ST segment-time curve (AUC), and average ST segment change for the episode (AUC/duration). Ischemic episodes, 87% of which were silent, occurred in 42% of the patients. Symptomatic episodes had greater maximum ST segment change than silent episodes (−2.4 vs −1.9 mm; p < 0.05) but were shorter in duration (11 vs 18 minutes; p < 0.05). Episodes that were unrelated to heart rate, that is, episodes with <20% increase in heart rate over the baseline rate at the onset of ischemia, made up 75% of all ischemic events and occurred in 90% of patients (19 of 21). Heart rate-related and unrelated ischemic episodes did not differ in duration, maximum ST segment change, AUC, or average ST segment change. It was concluded that: (1) as with patients with unstable angina, patients with severe coronary artery disease continue to have frequent episodes of silent myocardial ischemia despite intensive medical therapy; (2) painful episodes have greater maximum ST segment change but are shorter than silent ones; (3) most ischemic episodes (75%) occur without an initial increase in heart rate; and (4) heart rate-related and unrelated episodes are quantitatively similar.

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