Publication | Closed Access
Localization of the site of myocardial scarring in man by high-frequency components.
82
Citations
0
References
1969
Year
Cardiac MuscleHeart FailureBiomedical EngineeringStructural Heart DiseaseCoronary Artery DiseaseAcute Myocardial InfarctionThrombosisElectrophysiological EvaluationNotch RecognitionMyocardial ScarringStrokeAtherosclerosisCardiologyCardiac MechanicRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingHealth SciencesMyocardial InfarctionMedical ImagingCardiac PathologyOrthogonal EcgCardiovascular DiseaseCardiac PhysiologySpecific High-frequency EcgElectrophysiologyHigh-frequency ComponentsMedicineEmergency Medicine
The increased incidence of high-frequency components (notching) in electrocardiographic (ECG) recordings previously has been related to coronary artery disease, primary myocardial disease, and biventricular enlargement. This study included 130 subjects on whom autopsy permission was obtained, who had one or more sets of high-frequency, orthogonal ECG (XYZ) leads and direct-writing standard ECG leads recorded ante mortem. In each instance careful dissection of the heart was performed by two or more of the authors according to fixed protocol. Correlations were made between the site of infarction and the occurrence of notching in specific high-frequency ECG leads. Postero-inferior infarctions tended to express themselves with a predominance of increased notching in the Y lead, while anterior infarction manifested dominantly in the X lead. This was true in intramural as well as transmural lesions. The greatest value of notch recognition in diagnosing and localizing infarction appeared to be in subjects with n...