Value of the P-wave signal-averaged ECG for predicting atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery

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Abstract

Background. Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a commonly encountered arrhythmia in clinical practice, and it occurs frequently after cardiac surgery. The P-wave signal-averaged (SA) ECG noninvasively detects atrial conduction delay. Prior studies have described greater P-wave prolongation in patients with a history of AF, but prospective studies have not been performed. Methods and Results. Consecutive patients undergoing cardiac surgery were enrolled. The P-wave SAECG was recorded before surgery from three orthogonal leads using a sinus P-wave template and a cross-correlation function. The averaged P wave was filtered with a least-squares-fit filter and combined into a vector magnitude, and total P-wave duration was measured. Patients were observed after cardiac surgery for the development of AF. One hundred thirty patients were enrolled, and 33 (25%) developed AF 2.6±2.0 days after surgery. Patients with AF more often had left ventricular hypertrophy on ECG (P 140 milliseconds predicted AF with sensitivity of 77%, specificity of 55%, positive predictive accuracy of 37%, and negative predictive accuracy of 87%. The likelihood of experiencing AF was increased 3.9-fold if the SAECG P-wave duration was prolonged. P-wave SAECG results were independent of other clinical variables by multivariate analysis. Conclusions. The P-wave duration recorded with the SAECG is a potent, accurate, and independent predictor of AF after cardiac surgery.

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Steinberg, J. S., Zelenkofske, S., Wong, S. C., Gelernt, M., Sciacca, R., & Menchavez, E. (1993). Value of the P-wave signal-averaged ECG for predicting atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery. Circulation, 88(6), 2618–2622. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.88.6.2618

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