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Title: Role of the vectorcardiogram-derived spatial QRS-T angle in diagnosing left ventricular hypertrophy. Author: Man S, Rahmattulla C, Maan AC, Holman E, Bax JJ, van der Wall EE, Schalij MJ, Swenne CA. Journal: J Electrocardiol; 2012 Mar; 45(2):154-60. PubMed ID: 22074745. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Current criteria for electrocardiographic (ECG) diagnosis of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) have a low diagnostic accuracy. Addition of demographic, anthropomorphic, and additional ECG variables may improve accuracy. As hypertrophy affects action potential morphology and intraventricular conduction, QRS prolongation and T-wave morphology may occur and become manifest in the vectorcardiographic variables spatial QRS-T angle (SA) and spatial ventricular gradient. In this study, we attempted to improve the diagnostic accuracy for LVH by using a combination of demographic, anthropomorphic, ECG, and vectorcardiographic variables. METHODS: The study group (n = 196) was divided in 4 subgroups with, on one hand, echocardiographically diagnosed LVH or a normal echocardiogram and, on the other hand, with any of the conventional ECG signs for LVH or with normal ECGs. Each subgroup was randomly split into halves, yielding 2 equally-sized (n = 98) data sets A and B. Age, sex, height, weight, body mass index, body surface area (BSA), frontal QRS axis, QRS duration, QT duration, maximal QRS vector magnitude, SA, and ventricular gradient magnitude and orientation were univariate studied by receiver operating characteristic analysis and were used to build a stepwise linear discriminant model using P < .05 as entry and P > .10 as removal criterion. The discriminant model was built in set A (model A) and tested on set B. Stability checks were done by building a discriminant model on set B and testing on set A and by cross-validation analysis in the complete study group. RESULTS: The discriminant model equation was D = 5.130 × BSA - 0.014 × SA - 8.74, wherein D greater than or equal to 0 predicts a normal echocardiogram and D less than 0 predicts LVH. The diagnostic accuracy (79%) was better than the diagnostic accuracy of conventional ECG criteria for LVH (57%). CONCLUSION: The combination of BSA and SA yields a diagnostic accuracy of LVH that is superior to that of the conventional ECG criteria.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]