• Title/Summary/Keyword: Atrial premature complexes

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Diagnosis and Treatment of Premature Atrial or Ventricular Complexes (조기 수축의 진단과 치료)

  • Jinhee Ahn
    • The Korean Journal of Medicine
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    • v.99 no.1
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    • pp.17-24
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    • 2024
  • Premature atrial complex (PAC) and premature ventricular complex (PVC) are the most common arrhythmias. Most of them are benign, whereas some could be an initial sign of any underlying significant heart disease. Evaluation of daily burden and the presence of any association with underlying medical conditions are essential for proper assessment. Recently, newly developed electrocardiogram smart devices are widely available to document arrhythmias and identify correlations with symptoms. Management is required if the daily burden is high, patients are highly symptomatic, or significant structural heart disease is present. Antiarrhythmic drugs (AADs) are the first-line treatment, but if arrhythmias are drug-refractory or the patients are intolerable to AADs, catheter ablation is considered a good alternative in selected cases. In this paper, the proper diagnosis and management for PAC and PVC will be comprehensively reviewed.

Comparison of Novel Telemonitoring System Using the Single-lead Electrocardiogram Patch With Conventional Telemetry System

  • Soonil Kwon;Eue-Keun Choi;So-Ryoung Lee;Seil Oh;Hee-Seok Song;Young-Shin Lee;Sang-Jin Han;Hong Euy Lim
    • Korean Circulation Journal
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    • v.54 no.3
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    • pp.140-153
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    • 2024
  • Background and Objectives: Although a single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) patch may provide advantages for detecting arrhythmias in outpatient settings owing to user convenience, its comparative effectiveness for real-time telemonitoring in inpatient settings remains unclear. We aimed to compare a novel telemonitoring system using a single-lead ECG patch with a conventional telemonitoring system in an inpatient setting. Methods: This was a single-center, prospective cohort study. Patients admitted to the cardiology unit for arrhythmia treatment who required a wireless ECG telemonitoring system were enrolled. A single-lead ECG patch and conventional telemetry were applied simultaneously in hospitalized patients for over 24 hours for real-time telemonitoring. The basic ECG parameters, arrhythmia episodes, and signal loss or noise were compared between the 2 systems. Results: Eighty participants (mean age 62±10 years, 76.3% male) were enrolled. The three most common indications for ECG telemonitoring were atrial fibrillation (66.3%), sick sinus syndrome (12.5%), and atrioventricular block (10.0%). The intra-class correlation coefficients for detecting the number of total beats, atrial and ventricular premature complexes, maximal, average, and minimal heart rates, and pauses were all over 0.9 with p values for reliability <0.001. Compared to a conventional system, a novel system demonstrated significantly lower signal noise (median 0.3% [0.1-1.6%] vs. 2.4% [1.4-3.7%], p<0.001) and fewer episodes of signal loss (median 22 [2-53] vs. 64 [22-112] episodes, p=0.002). Conclusions: The novel telemonitoring system using a single-lead ECG patch offers performance comparable to that of a conventional system while significantly reducing signal loss and noise.