- Signal-averaged electrocardiogram
Signal-averaged electrocardiography (SAECG) is a special electrocardiographic technique, in which multiple electric signals from the
heart are averaged to removeinterference and reveal small variations in theQRS complex , usually the so-called "late potentials". These may represent a predisposition towards potentially dangerous ventricular tachyarrhythmias.Technique
Procedure
A resting
electrocardiogram (ECG) is recorded in thesupine position using an ECG machine equipped with SAECG software; this can be done by aphysician ,nurse , ormedical technician . Unlike standard basal ECG recording, which requires only a few seconds, SAECG recording requires a few minutes (usually about 7-10 minutes), as the machine must record multiple subsequent QRS potentials to remove interference due toskeletal muscle and to obtain a statistically significant average trace. For this reason, it is important for the patient to lie as still as possible during the recording.Results
SAECG recording yields a single, averaged QRS potential, usually printed in a much larger scale than standard ECGs, upon which the SAECG software performs calculations to reveal small variations (typically 1-25 mV) in the final portion of the QRS complex (the so-called "late potentials, or more accurately, "late ventricular potentials"). These can be immediately interpreted by comparing results with cut-off values.
Significance
Late potentials are taken to represent delayed and fragmented
depolarisation of the ventricularmyocardium , which may be the substrate for a micro-re-entry mechanism, implying a higher risk of potentially dangerous ventricular tachyarrhythmias. This has been used for therisk stratification ofsudden cardiac death in people who have had amyocardial infarction , as well as in people with knowncoronary heart disease , cardiomyopathies, or unexplainedsyncope .Still, the real predictive value of these findings is questioned. Late potentials may be found in 0-10% of normal volunteers. When used as a prognostic factor for the development ofventricular tachycardia , they have a sensitivity of 72% and a specificity of 75%, yielding apositive predictive value of 20% and anegative predictive value of 20%.References
* PMID 8522703 -
American College of Cardiology Expert Consensus Document (1996): Signal-averaged Electrocardiography, J Am Coll Cardiol. 1996 Jan;27(1):238-49.
* Drew Provan and Andrew Krentz (editors),Oxford Handbook of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation ,Oxford University Press ,2003 corrected edition.
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