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(Chest. 1970;57:460-467.)
© 1970 American College of Chest Physicians

The Electrocardiogram in Constrictive Pericarditis before and after Radical Pericardectomy

D. Avgoustakis M.D.1; D. Lazarides M.D., F.C.C.P.2; D. Athanasiades M.D.3; and G. Michaelides M.D.4

1 Associate Professor of Cardiology, National University of Athens Medical School; Acting Chief, Department of Cardiology
2 Professor and Chairman, First Surgical Service Aristotelean University School of Medicine, Thessaloniki, Greece
3 Instructor in Cardiology, Department of Cardiology, University of Athens Medical School
4 Professor and Chairman, Department of Cardiology, Nation University of Athens Medical School

The electrocardiographic findings of 18 patients with chronic constrictive pericarditis and their progress 16 to 80 months following radical pericardectomy were studied. Atrial fibrillation, abnormal P waves, right QRS axis deviation, low QRS complex voltage in the conventional leads as well as T wave inversion, were the common preoperative electrocardiographic findings. Following radical pericardectomy restoration of the P wave abnormalities to normal was noted in eight out of 11 patients. QRS complex voltage in general increased and in the majority of patients the AQRS was moved to the left. Restoration of the T wave changes to normal was ascertained in 14 patients and it was accompanied always by an excellent clinical result and hemodynamic restoration to normal in the nine recatheterized patients. Persistence, however, of abnormal T waves might be accompanied by an excellent clinical result as it was observed in two of our patients, in one of whom recatheterization showed restoration of intracardiac pressures to normal.







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Copyright © 1970 by the American College of Chest Physicians.