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  • Title: Enhancement of an old diagnostic tool, the standard 12-lead ECG.
    Author: Hindman NB, Wagner GS.
    Journal: J Electrocardiol; 1987 Apr; 20(2):93-7. PubMed ID: 3598459.
    Abstract:
    The standard 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) has long been a reliable clinical tool for diagnosis of myocardial infarction (MI). Minutes may be crucial in the decision regarding urgent interventions for the salvage of severely ischemic myocardium during an acute MI. Besides history and physical findings the ECG may be the only clinical tool immediately available in deciding to initiate acute coronary thrombolysis or balloon angioplasty. Most of the newer techniques are difficult to perform and time consuming, and thus are not immediately available. Recent studies have indicated that there may be important information revealed by the amplitude and direction of the ST-T vectors on the admission ECG that will correlate with the final infarct size which evolves during the next few hours. The Selvester QRS scoring system, based on computer simulations of the human heart activation sequence, uses quantitative information in the 12-lead ECG to estimate the size of an MI. This system, which can be automated, has been examined for specificity in a large database of normals, and validated in a series of comprehensive post-mortem studies, and in other clinical estimates of prognosis and MI size. The QRS scoring system is limited by its inability to differentiate between small MIs and normal myocardium and by the confounding effects on the ECG of ventricular hypertrophy, conduction defects, and multiple MIs. Current studies are expected to overcome most of these limitations. Computer technology further augments the clinical utility of the ECG by providing unique assessment of a patient from individualized demographic and historical characteristics.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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