Ventricular ectopic activity: prevalence and risk
- PMID: 2480710
- DOI: 10.1016/0002-9149(89)91200-9
Ventricular ectopic activity: prevalence and risk
Abstract
Ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring and the frequent use of stress electrocardiography have been important tools in characterizing the prevalence and prognostic importance of ventricular ectopic activity in both healthy persons and patients with organic heart disease. These studies have demonstrated that ventricular ectopy is not uncommon in persons with no evidence of heart disease. However, it is rarely of high density or repetitive, and even when frequent or repetitive, or both, carries little, if any, risk of sudden death in patients without syncope. However, in patients with organic heart disease and in certain clinical settings, frequent and repetitive ventricular ectopy identifies a population at high risk for arrhythmia-induced syncope or sudden death. These rhythm disturbances have particular prognostic importance in ischemic heart disease with depressed left ventricular function and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Patients with presyncope or syncope and structural heart disease who demonstrate frequent and repetitive ventricular ectopy are also a high-risk group. Therefore, individual risk stratification is important in deciding whether and how to treat patients with ventricular ectopy.
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