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Chest, Vol 74, 402-407, Copyright © 1978 by American College of Chest Physicians


ARTICLES

Detection of ventricular ectopy in patients with coronary heart disease and normal subjects by exercise testing and ambulatory electrocardiography

PF Poblete, HL Kennedy and DG Caralis

Maximal exercise testing and 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic recording (Holter monitor) were utilized in the detection of ventricular ectopy in 90 patients with stable chronic coronary heart disease and in 30 normal subjects. Although the occurrence of any ventricular ectopic activity, as detected by either or both methods, was common, the incidence was significantly higher (P less than 0.001) in patients with coronary heart disease (86 percent; 77/90), as compared to that in normal subjects (40 percent; 12/30). Ventricular arrhythmia was more frequently detected by the 24-hour continuous electrocardiographic recording, being found in 70 of the 90 patients with coronary heart disease and in ten of the 30 normal subjects. In comparison, exercise testing disclosed ventricular ectopy in 56 of the 90 patients with coronary heart disease and in two of the 30 normal subjects. Multiform and repetitive patterns of ventricular ectopy were detected twice as commonly by continuous electrocardiographic recording than with exercise testing, and these patterns were present in one-half of the patients with coronary heart disease. Both methods of examination adjunctively disclosed more ventricular ectopy than either method alone.





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Copyright © 1978 by the American College of Chest Physicians.