These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Time- and frequency-domain analysis of beat to beat P-wave duration, PR interval and RR interval can predict asystole as form of syncope during head-up tilt.
    Author: Piccirillo G, Moscucci F, Fiorucci C, Di Iorio C, Mastropietri F, Magrì D.
    Journal: Physiol Meas; 2016 Nov; 37(11):1910-1924. PubMed ID: 27681167.
    Abstract:
    To seek possible differences in short-period temporal RR interval, P-wave and PR interval dispersion and spectral coherence in patients with a head-up tilt test positive for vasovagal syncope with or without prolonged asystole, severe symptoms and at high risk of trauma. We retrospectively reviewed 5 min ECG and blood pressure recordings obtained at baseline, at rest and during head-up tilt in 40 patients diagnosed as having recurrent vasovagal syncope confirmed at a head-up tilt test. We analysed autoregressive spectral power for all the ECG-derived variables, focusing on temporal P-wave and PR interval dispersion indexes as well as their spectral coherence calculated on the same 5 min recordings at rest and during tilt. ECG recordings obtained during tilt before syncope showed significantly lower P  →  PR spectral coherence and higher RR standard deviations in patients with tilt-induced asystole than in those without (0.567  ±  0.097 versus 0.670  ±  0.127, p: 0.010 and 84  ±  36 versus 46  ±  22 ms2, p  <  0.0001). Differences in the RR standard deviations persisted also on the last hundred beats (-100) (113  ±  54 versus 34  ±  17 ms2, p  <  0.0001). Multiple regression analysis identified a significantly negative association between the maximum RR intervals and P  →  PR coherence at rest (β:  -0.3, p  <  0.05) and positive association with RR-100 standard deviation during tilt-induced syncope (β: 0.621, p  <  0.001). P  →  PR spectral coherence could be used to assess the risk of prolonged asystole in patients with tilt-induced vasovagal syncope as well as as a possible surrogate for tilt-testing during these patients' follow-up.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]