Holter monitoring as a noninvasive indicator of cardiac involvement in sarcoidosis
- PMID: 7523035
- DOI: 10.1378/chest.106.4.1021
Holter monitoring as a noninvasive indicator of cardiac involvement in sarcoidosis
Abstract
We investigated the usefulness of 24-h Holter monitoring for identification of myocardial involvement in 38 patients with sarcoidosis, including 12 patients with cardiac sarcoidosis, and 58 healthy controls. Ventricular ectopic beats (VEB) > or = 100 beats per day were detected in 8 (67 percent) of 12 patients with cardiac sarcoidosis, in 2 (8 percent) of 26 patients without cardiac sarcoidosis, and in 3 (5 percent) of 58 healthy controls. Holter monitoring was associated with a sensitivity of 67 percent and a specificity of 62 percent for cardiac sarcoidosis in the overall study population. In patients with sarcoidosis, specificity was 80 percent. Lown's grade 4 A and 4 B VEBs were detected in 8 (67 percent) of 12 patients with cardiac sarcoidosis, in 2 (8 percent) of 26 patients with sarcoidosis without cardiac involvement, and in 2 (3 percent) of 58 controls. Holter monitoring was associated with a sensitivity of 67 percent and a specificity of 80 percent for identification of cardiac involvement in patients with systemic sarcoidosis. Our findings suggest that 24-h Holter monitoring provides a convenient and inexpensive means of noninvasive screening for cardiac involvement in generalized sarcoidosis, even in patients and outpatients who are without symptoms.
Comment in
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Myocardial sarcoidosis. A wolf in sheep's clothing.Chest. 1994 Oct;106(4):988-90. doi: 10.1378/chest.106.4.988. Chest. 1994. PMID: 7924539 No abstract available.
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