Martínez Martínez JA, Mele E, Suárez L. The prognostic value of right atrial pacing after acute myocardial infarction.
Int J Cardiol 1990;
28:43-9. [PMID:
2365531 DOI:
10.1016/0167-5273(90)90007-r]
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Abstract
We performed right atrial pacing in 90 consecutive patients 10 to 30 days (mean 16.8 days) after acute myocardial infarction. Right atrial pacing was normal in 28 patients, depression of the ST segment occurred in 27 patients, systolic blood pressure fell below control values in 20 patients and, in 15 patients, right atrial pacing was non-diagnostic. Follow-up was from 12 to 28 months (mean = 17.3). Global mortality was 11.1%, with none of the patients with normal tests dying, 11% of those with ST depression, 30% of those with induced hypotension (P less than 0.01) and 7.1% of those in whom pacing was non-diagnostic. Patients with high clinical risk at discharge in Peel Class III-IV, showed 41.2% mortality during the period of follow-up. None of those had shown normal responses to pacing, but those dying included 50% of the patients with ST depression and 66.7% of those in whom right atrial pacing induced hypotension. Development of new angina during the period of follow-up was more frequent among the patients with ST depression (33.3%) (P less than 0.001). Thus, our results showed that right atrial pacing was useful in predicting mortality after acute myocardial infarction. In patients at high risk, we observed that a fall of systolic blood pressure was the best predictor of mortality.
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