The Electrocardiogram in Congenital Heart Disease
- 1 April 1951
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 3 (4), 564-578
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.3.4.564
Abstract
Adequate unipolar electrocardiograms have been recorded on 101 patients with congenital heart disease and the findings analyzed. It has been found that the chief value of such tracings rests in the determination of ventricular preponderance, the evidence being obtained from study of the QRS complexes in unipolar limb and multiple precordial leads, with relatively little help from the RS-T segments and T waves. Auricular hypertrophy, encountered chiefly in association with pulmonic stenosis and tricuspid valve disease, could be best detected by analysis of P waves seen in the right precordial leads rather than in the limb leads. Intraventricular block was observed both with auricular and with ventricular septal defects, and was also found in Ebstein's disease and with coarctation of the aorta. Auriculoventricular block and arrhythmias were rare.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pulmonary stenosis with intact interventricular septumAmerican Heart Journal, 1945
- ATRIAL SEPTAL DEFECT STUDY OF HEMODYNAMICS BY THE TECHNIQUE OF RIGHT HEAET CATHETERIZATIONThe American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1945
- Cor biatriatum triloculare: Case reportAmerican Heart Journal, 1944
- Coarctation of the aorta, with rupture of the wall below the point of constriction: Report of a case and review of the literatureAmerican Heart Journal, 1942
- ATRIAL SEPTAL DEFECTHeart, 1941
- The diagnosis and the effects of ligationof the patent ductus arteriosus: A report of eleven casesThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1939
- Complete transposition of the great vesselsAmerican Heart Journal, 1938
- Congenital transposition of the great arterial trunksAmerican Heart Journal, 1938
- INTERVENTRICULAR SEPTAL DEFECT WITH DEXTROPOSITION OF AORTA AND DILATATION OF THE PULMONARY ARTERY (“EISENMENGER COMPLEX”) TERMINATING BY CEREBRAL ABSCESSThe American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1929
- Coarctation of the aorta of the adult type I. Complete obliteration of the descending arch at insertion of the ductus in a boy of fourteen; Bicuspid aortic valve; Impending rupture of the aorta; Cerebral deathAmerican Heart Journal, 1928