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On line ST-segment analysis for detection of myocardial ischaemia during and after coronary revascularization

TLDR
Automated ST segment analysis with the Marquette® Series 7000 monitoring system demonstrates good diagnostic accuracy, moderate sensitivity, and high specificity, however, clinically significant false negative and false positive rates of ischaemia detection are associated with its use, especially in the postoperative period.
Abstract
A paucity of information exists to validate the accuracy and reliability of ECG monitoring in the operating room or ICU. The purpose of this study was to determine the accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of the Marquette ECG monitor for detection of perioperative myocardial ischaemia (PMI) as measured by ST segment changes in a high risk population. Monitoring for PMI in 28 patients scheduled for aortocoronary bypass surgery was done with the Cardiodata PR® ambulatory continuous electrocardiography (ACECG) monitor lead V5, and compared with lead V5 of the Marquette® Series 7000 ECG/ Surgical operating room monitor, and ECG/Resp ICU monitor. The Marquette lead V5 was evaluated using current criteria for the assessment of diagnostic tests including concordance, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, false positive and false negative rates and compared with the ACECG monitor which served as the reference or “gold standard.” Agreement beyond chance between the two methods was assessed using the Kappa statistic. Of the 53 observation data points, 27 were defined as ischaemic episodes by ACECG. Concordance between lead V5 in each system was 83% (44/53 episodes). Discordance was 17% (9/53 episodes), predominantly in the postbypass interval (77%, 7/9; P = 0.0184). The incidences of false negatives and false positives for Marquette lead V5 was 26% (7/27) and 7.7% ( 2/26), respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of the Marquette was 0.74 and 0.92. Positive predictive value was 0.91, negative predictive value was 0.77, and Kappa statistic was 66%. Automated ST segment analysis with the Marquette® Series 7000 monitoring system demonstrates good diagnostic accuracy, moderate sensitivity, and high specificity. However, clinically significant false negative and false positive rates of ischaemia detection are associated with its use, especially in the postoperative period.

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Postoperative Critical Care of the Adult Cardiac Surgical Patient. Part I: Routine Postoperative Care

TL;DR: Critical care of the cardiac surgical patient is a complex and dynamic endeavor and patient safety is enhanced by experienced personnel, a structured handover between the operating room and ICU teams, and appropriate transfusion strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

A knowledge-based technique for automated detection of ischaemic episodes in long duration electrocardiograms.

TL;DR: A novel method for the detection of ischaemic episodes in long duration ECGs is proposed that includes noise handling, feature extraction, rule-based beat classification, sliding window classification and ischaemia episode identification, all integrated in a four-stage procedure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines for interpretability of continuous electrocardiography on the association of silent ischemia with troponin release after major noncardiac surgery.

TL;DR: Applying the guideline criteria for the interpretation of c ECG enhanced cECG diagnostic value in surgical patients and increased the association between troponin and perioperative ischemia in CM5.

Direct Mathematical Method for Real-time Ischemic Detection from Electrocardiograms Using the Discrete Hermite Transform

TL;DR: A real-time automated identification technique is developed for the detection of ischemic episodes in long term electrocardiographic (ECG) signals using mathematical expansions involving the Discrete Dilated Hermite Transform.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting ischaemic events in the perioperative period: in search of the perfect tool

TL;DR: It became obvious that the pathophysiology of unstable angina and myocardial infarction involved plaque rupture and thrombus formation, and not only vasospasm and clearly not simple progression in the accumulation of atherosclerotic material.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Assessment of Diagnostic Tests: A Survey of Current Medical Research

Samuel B. Sheps, +1 more
- 02 Nov 1984 - 
TL;DR: There is a clear need for greater attention to accepted methodological standards on the part of researchers, reviewers, and editors in diagnostic test evaluation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Postoperative Myocardial Ischemia in Patients Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery

TL;DR: The authors conclude that the incidence of postoperative ischemia peaks shortly after revascularization, during which time it is symptomatically silent, difficult to detect, and related to adverse cardiac outcome.