Screening of young competitive athletes for the prevention of sudden cardiac death with a wireless electrocardiographic transmission device: a pilot study

JH Cho, MA Selen, AG Kocheril - BMC research notes, 2015 - Springer
JH Cho, MA Selen, AG Kocheril
BMC research notes, 2015Springer
Background The 12-lead electrocardiographic screening for the prevention of sudden
cardiac death in young competitive athletes is not cost-effective and thus not routinely
recommended. We investigate whether a less expensive wireless electrocardiographic
transmission device can be used to screen for the prevention of sudden cardiac death in this
population. Methods During pre-participation screening, twenty college football players
underwent two electrocardiograms: a conventional 12-lead electrocardiogram and a …
Background
The 12-lead electrocardiographic screening for the prevention of sudden cardiac death in young competitive athletes is not cost-effective and thus not routinely recommended. We investigate whether a less expensive wireless electrocardiographic transmission device can be used to screen for the prevention of sudden cardiac death in this population.
Methods
During pre-participation screening, twenty college football players underwent two electrocardiograms: a conventional 12-lead electrocardiogram and a wireless 9-lead electrocardiogram. We compared several electrocardiographic parameters (QRS duration, left ventricular hypertrophy using the Cornell voltage criteria and the Sokolow–Lyon criteria, ST deviation and corrected QT interval) to determine the correlation.
Results
The QRS duration, left ventricular hypertrophy using the Cornell voltage criteria and the Sokolow–Lyon criteria and corrected QT interval exhibited significant correlation between the two types of electrocardiograms (correlation coefficient 0.878, 0.630, 0.770 and 0.847, respectively with P values of 0.01, 0.003, 0.01 and 0.01, respectively). ST deviation in V1 was weakly correlated between the two types of electrocardiograms without statistical significance (correlation coefficient 0.360 with a P value of 0.119).
Conclusions
Our newly developed wireless 9-lead electrocardiogram demonstrated significant correlations with a conventional 12-lead electrocardiogram in terms of QRS duration, left ventricular hypertrophy and corrected QT interval.
Springer
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