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  • Title: Clinical logistics in 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring.
    Author: RuDusky BM.
    Journal: Angiology; 2003; 54(5):587-91. PubMed ID: 14565634.
    Abstract:
    In total, 493 ambulatory ECG recordings were studied. Women were preponderant (62.3% vs 37.7%). The average age of women and men patients was 66.9 and 64.7 years, respectively. Of the ECGs studied, 71.4% showed abnormalities and 28.6% appeared completely normal. Urgent abnormalities were noted in 1.4% of the recordings and significant abnormalities were present in 14.6%. Subjective complaints were noted in their logbooks by 18.8% of patients, but correlation of complaints with the electrocardiographic abnormalities was noted in only 1.2% of cases. The attending cardiologist concluded that 23.9% of the tests supported reasons of valid necessity for performance. Two hundred seventy-three recordings were classified as electrocardiographically abnormal (55.4%) but were clinically insignificant. General practitioners requested 59.8% of the tests versus 40.2% by specialists. Preponderant abnormalities included premature atrial and ventricular contractions, supraventricular tachycardia, and atrial fibrillation. Less frequent abnormalities included ventricular tachycardia (4.6%), atrial flutter, atrioventricular block, artificial pacemaker rhythm, nodal rhythm, and intermittent bundle branch block.
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