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@article{1159115, author = {Václavík, Jan and Špinar, Jindřich and Vindiš, David and Vítovec, Jiří and Widimslý, Petr and Číhalík, Čestmír and Linhart, Aleš and Málek, Filip and Táborský, Miloš and Dušek, Ladislav and Jarkovský, Jiří and Fedorco, Marián and Felšőci, Marián and Miklík, Roman and Pařenica, Jiří}, article_location = {Milan}, article_number = {3}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11739-012-0862-1}, keywords = {Acute heart failure; ECG; Electrocardiography; Mortality; Prognosis}, language = {eng}, issn = {1828-0447}, journal = {Internal and emergency medicine}, title = {ECG in patients with acute heart failure can predict in-hospital and long-term mortality}, volume = {9}, year = {2014} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1159115 AU - Václavík, Jan - Špinar, Jindřich - Vindiš, David - Vítovec, Jiří - Widimslý, Petr - Číhalík, Čestmír - Linhart, Aleš - Málek, Filip - Táborský, Miloš - Dušek, Ladislav - Jarkovský, Jiří - Fedorco, Marián - Felšőci, Marián - Miklík, Roman - Pařenica, Jiří PY - 2014 TI - ECG in patients with acute heart failure can predict in-hospital and long-term mortality JF - Internal and emergency medicine VL - 9 IS - 3 SP - 283-291 EP - 283-291 PB - Springer-Verlag Italia SN - 18280447 KW - Acute heart failure KW - ECG KW - Electrocardiography KW - Mortality KW - Prognosis N2 - Initial risk stratification in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) is poorly validated. Previous studies tended to evaluate the prognostic significance of only one or two selected ECG parameters. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of multiple ECG parameters on mortality in AHF. The Acute Heart Failure Database (AHEAD) registry collected data from 4,153 patients admitted for AHF to seven hospitals with Catheter Laboratory facilities. Clinical variables, heart rate, duration of QRS, QT and QTC intervals, type of rhythm and ST-T segment changes on admission were collected in a web-based database. 12.7 % patients died during hospitalisation, the remainder were discharged and followed for a median of 16.2 months. The most important parameters were a prolonged QRS and a junctional rhythm, which independently predict both in-hospital mortality [QRS > 100 ms, odds ratio (OR) 1.329, 95 % CI 1.052-1.680; junctional rhythm, OR 3.715, 95 % CI 1.748-7.896] and long-term mortality (QRS > 120 ms, OR 1.428, 95 % CI 1.160-1.757; junctional rhythm, OR 2.629, 95 % CI 1.538-4.496). Increased hospitalisation mortality is predicted by ST segment elevation (OR 1.771, 95 % CI 1.383-2.269) and prolonged QTC interval >475 ms (OR 1.483, 95 % CI 1.016-2.164). Presence of atrial fibrillation and bundle branch block is associated with increased unadjusted long-term mortality, but mostly reflects more advanced heart disease, and their predictive significance is attenuated in the multivariate analysis. ECG in patients admitted for acute heart failure carries significant short- and long-term prognostic information, and should be carefully evaluated. ER -
VÁCLAVÍK, Jan, Jindřich ŠPINAR, David VINDIŠ, Jiří VÍTOVEC, Petr WIDIMSLÝ, Čestmír ČÍHALÍK, Aleš LINHART, Filip MÁLEK, Miloš TÁBORSKÝ, Ladislav DUŠEK, Jiří JARKOVSKÝ, Marián FEDORCO, Marián FELŠ$\backslash$H OCI, Roman MIKLÍK a Jiří PAŘENICA. ECG in patients with acute heart failure can predict in-hospital and long-term mortality. \textit{Internal and emergency medicine}. Milan: Springer-Verlag Italia, 2014, roč.~9, č.~3, s.~283-291. ISSN~1828-0447. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11739-012-0862-1.
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