Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice

Abstract The electrocardiogram (ECG) has been reinvigorated by the identification of electrical alterations that were not definitely clarified before. In this context, and mainly regarding the definition of arrhythmogenic substrates, the association of the ECG with the vectorcardiogram (VCG) has gathered much more information about the cardiac electrical phenomena, thus allowing us to differentiate potentially fatal cases from benign ones. Obtaining a VCG concomitantly with the performance of an ECG has led to a significant gain in the definition of extremely sophisticated pathologies, which function suffer some type of structural or dynamic alterations, involving either the reduction or enhancement of ionic channels and currents. The classic aspects of the ECG/VCG association in the differential diagnosis of myocardial infarctions, conduction disorders, atrial and ventricular hypertrophies, and the correlations between these electrical disorders are still valid and assertive. The association of these pathologies is further clarified when they are seen through the ECG/VCG dyad. The three-dimensional spatial orientation of both the atrial and the ventricular activity provides a far more complete observation tool than the ECG linear form. The modern analysis of the ECG and its respective VCG, simultaneously obtained by the recent technique called electro-vectorcardiogram (ECG/VCG), brought a significant gain for the differential diagnosis of some pathologies. Therefore, we illustrate how this type of analysis can elucidate some of the most important diagnoses found in our daily clinical practice as cardiologists.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pastore,Carlos Alberto, Samesima,Nelson, Pereira Filho,Horacio Gomes, Tobias,Nancy Maria Martins de Oliveira, Madaloso,Bruna Affonso, Facin,Mirella Esmanhotto
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC 2019
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0066-782X2019000700087
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S0066-782X2019000700087
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S0066-782X20190007000872020-02-07Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical PracticePastore,Carlos AlbertoSamesima,NelsonPereira Filho,Horacio GomesTobias,Nancy Maria Martins de OliveiraMadaloso,Bruna AffonsoFacin,Mirella Esmanhotto Electrocardiography/methods Vectocardiography/methods Electrophysiological Phenomena Internal Medicine/methods Abstract The electrocardiogram (ECG) has been reinvigorated by the identification of electrical alterations that were not definitely clarified before. In this context, and mainly regarding the definition of arrhythmogenic substrates, the association of the ECG with the vectorcardiogram (VCG) has gathered much more information about the cardiac electrical phenomena, thus allowing us to differentiate potentially fatal cases from benign ones. Obtaining a VCG concomitantly with the performance of an ECG has led to a significant gain in the definition of extremely sophisticated pathologies, which function suffer some type of structural or dynamic alterations, involving either the reduction or enhancement of ionic channels and currents. The classic aspects of the ECG/VCG association in the differential diagnosis of myocardial infarctions, conduction disorders, atrial and ventricular hypertrophies, and the correlations between these electrical disorders are still valid and assertive. The association of these pathologies is further clarified when they are seen through the ECG/VCG dyad. The three-dimensional spatial orientation of both the atrial and the ventricular activity provides a far more complete observation tool than the ECG linear form. The modern analysis of the ECG and its respective VCG, simultaneously obtained by the recent technique called electro-vectorcardiogram (ECG/VCG), brought a significant gain for the differential diagnosis of some pathologies. Therefore, we illustrate how this type of analysis can elucidate some of the most important diagnoses found in our daily clinical practice as cardiologists.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBCArquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia v.113 n.1 20192019-07-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0066-782X2019000700087en10.5935/abc.20190095
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Pastore,Carlos Alberto
Samesima,Nelson
Pereira Filho,Horacio Gomes
Tobias,Nancy Maria Martins de Oliveira
Madaloso,Bruna Affonso
Facin,Mirella Esmanhotto
spellingShingle Pastore,Carlos Alberto
Samesima,Nelson
Pereira Filho,Horacio Gomes
Tobias,Nancy Maria Martins de Oliveira
Madaloso,Bruna Affonso
Facin,Mirella Esmanhotto
Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice
author_facet Pastore,Carlos Alberto
Samesima,Nelson
Pereira Filho,Horacio Gomes
Tobias,Nancy Maria Martins de Oliveira
Madaloso,Bruna Affonso
Facin,Mirella Esmanhotto
author_sort Pastore,Carlos Alberto
title Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice
title_short Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice
title_full Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice
title_fullStr Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice
title_full_unstemmed Applicability of the Electro-Vectorcardiogram in Current Clinical Practice
title_sort applicability of the electro-vectorcardiogram in current clinical practice
description Abstract The electrocardiogram (ECG) has been reinvigorated by the identification of electrical alterations that were not definitely clarified before. In this context, and mainly regarding the definition of arrhythmogenic substrates, the association of the ECG with the vectorcardiogram (VCG) has gathered much more information about the cardiac electrical phenomena, thus allowing us to differentiate potentially fatal cases from benign ones. Obtaining a VCG concomitantly with the performance of an ECG has led to a significant gain in the definition of extremely sophisticated pathologies, which function suffer some type of structural or dynamic alterations, involving either the reduction or enhancement of ionic channels and currents. The classic aspects of the ECG/VCG association in the differential diagnosis of myocardial infarctions, conduction disorders, atrial and ventricular hypertrophies, and the correlations between these electrical disorders are still valid and assertive. The association of these pathologies is further clarified when they are seen through the ECG/VCG dyad. The three-dimensional spatial orientation of both the atrial and the ventricular activity provides a far more complete observation tool than the ECG linear form. The modern analysis of the ECG and its respective VCG, simultaneously obtained by the recent technique called electro-vectorcardiogram (ECG/VCG), brought a significant gain for the differential diagnosis of some pathologies. Therefore, we illustrate how this type of analysis can elucidate some of the most important diagnoses found in our daily clinical practice as cardiologists.
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC
publishDate 2019
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0066-782X2019000700087
work_keys_str_mv AT pastorecarlosalberto applicabilityoftheelectrovectorcardiogramincurrentclinicalpractice
AT samesimanelson applicabilityoftheelectrovectorcardiogramincurrentclinicalpractice
AT pereirafilhohoraciogomes applicabilityoftheelectrovectorcardiogramincurrentclinicalpractice
AT tobiasnancymariamartinsdeoliveira applicabilityoftheelectrovectorcardiogramincurrentclinicalpractice
AT madalosobrunaaffonso applicabilityoftheelectrovectorcardiogramincurrentclinicalpractice
AT facinmirellaesmanhotto applicabilityoftheelectrovectorcardiogramincurrentclinicalpractice
_version_ 1756382152260321280