Continuous electrocardiographic monitoring in patients with sickle‐cell anemia during pain crisis

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Abstract

Electrocardiographic studies in patients with sickle‐cell anemia have been performed during the normal resting state with routine twelve‐lead ECGs. We studied 30 patients with sickle‐cell disease in acute crisis with 24‐hour continuous electrocardiographic monitoring. The standard ECG demonstrated a high incidence of abnormalities, but only three patients had arrhythmias. These findings contrasted sharply with the results of continuous monitoring, during which arrhythmias were detected in 24 of 30 patients. They were fairly evenly split between atrial (60%) and ventricular (67%). Nine of the patients had “complex arrhythmias” including two with episodes of ventricular tachycardia. Seventeen patients subsequently underwent equilibrium gated‐blood pool scans. Eight patients had abnormal contractility and tended to have more arrhythmias on monitoring than those with normal contractility. Thus, continuous electrocardiographic monitoring of sickle‐cell patients during crisis revealed a higher incidence of arrhythmias than previously thought. Copyright © 1983 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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APA

Maisel, A., Friedman, H., Flint, L., Koshy, M., & Prabhu, R. (1983). Continuous electrocardiographic monitoring in patients with sickle‐cell anemia during pain crisis. Clinical Cardiology, 6(7), 339–344. https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.4960060707

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