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The differential diagnosis on the electrocardiogram between ventricular tachycardia and preexcited tachycardia
Author(s) -
Steurer Günter,
Gürsoy Sinan,
Frey Berhaerd,
Simonis Frank,
Andries Eric,
Brugada Pedro,
Kuck Karl
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
clinical cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.263
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-8737
pISSN - 0160-9289
DOI - 10.1002/clc.4960170606
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , tachycardia , qrs complex , ventricular tachycardia , electrocardiography , accessory pathway , anesthesia , atrial fibrillation , catheter ablation
Abstract The 12‐lead surface electrocardiogram is a simple and useful tool for the differential diagnosis of regular wide QRS complex tachycardia. However, criteria do not as yet exist to discriminate between ventricular tachycardia and supraventricular tachycardia with anterograde conduction over an accessory pathway (preexcited tachycardia). Therefore, we designed a new stepwise approach with three criteria for the electrocardiographic differential diagnosis between ventricular tachycardia and preexcited tachycardia and prospectively studied 267 regular tachycardias with electrophysiologically proven mechanism and a wide QRS complex (≥ 0.12 s): 149 consecutive ventricular tachycardias and 118 consecutive preexcited regular tachycardias. Underlying heart disease was old myocardial infarction in 133 of 149 (89%) ventricular tachycardias. The patients presenting with preexcited tachycardia had no additional structural heart disease. Atrial fibrillation with preexcited QRS complex was not included. The criteria favoring ventricular tachycardia were: (1) presence of predominantly negative QRS complexes in the precordial leads V 4 to V 6 , (2) presence of a QR complex in one or more of the precordial leads V 2 to V 6 , and (3) AV relation different from 1:1 (more QRS complexes than P waves). The final sensitivity and specificity of these three consecutive steps to diagnose ventricular tachycardia were 0.75 and 1.00, respectively. This new stepwise approach is sensitive and highly specific for the differential diagnosis between ventricular tachycardia in coronary artery disease and preexcited regular tachycardia.

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