45 results on '"Mäkijärvi, Markku"'
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2. The cross-national applicability of lean implementation measures and hospital performance measures: a case study of Finland and the USA.
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REPONEN, Elina, RUNDALL, Thomas G, SHORTELL, Stephen M, BLODGETT, Janet C, JOKELA, Ritva, MÄKIJÄRVI, Markku, TORKKI, Paulus, and Mäkijärvi, Markku
- Abstract
Background: Health-care organizations around the world are striving to achieve transformational performance improvement, often through adopting process improvement methodologies such as lean management. Indeed, lean management has been implemented in hospitals in many countries. But despite a shared methodology and the potential benefit of benchmarking lean implementation and its effects on hospital performance, cross-national lean benchmarking is rare. Health-care organizations in different countries operate in very different contexts, including different health-care system models, and these differences may be perceived as limiting the ability of improvers to benchmark lean implementation and related organizational performance. However, no empirical research is available on the international relevance and applicability of lean implementation and hospital performance measures. To begin understanding the opportunities and limitations related to cross-national benchmarking of lean in hospitals, we conducted a cross-national case study of the relevance and applicability of measures of lean implementation in hospitals and hospital performance.Methods: We report an exploratory case study of the relevance of lean implementation measures and the applicability of hospital performance measures using quantitative comparisons of data from Hospital District of Helsinki and Uusimaa (HUS) Helsinki University Hospital in Finland and a sample of 75 large academic hospitals in the USA.Results: The relevance of lean-related measures was high across the two countries: almost 90% of the items developed for a US survey were relevant and available from HUS. A majority of the US-based measures for financial performance (66.7%), service provision/utilization (100.0%) and service provision/care processes (60.0%) were available from HUS. Differences in patient satisfaction measures prevented comparisons between HUS and the USA. Of 18 clinical outcome measures, only four (22%) were not comparable. Clinical outcome measures were less affected by the differences in health-care system models than measures related to service provision and financial performance.Conclusions: Lean implementation measures are highly relevant in health-care organizations operating in the USA and Finland, as is the applicability of a variety of performance improvement measures. Cross-national benchmarking in lean healthcare is feasible, but a careful assessment of contextual factors, including the health-care system model, and their impact on the applicability and relevance of chosen benchmarking measures is necessary. The differences between the US and Finnish health-care system models is most clearly reflected in financial performance measures and care process measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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3. Benchmarking outcomes on multiple contextual levels in lean healthcare: a systematic review, development of a conceptual framework, and a research agenda.
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Reponen, Elina, Rundall, Thomas G., Shortell, Stephen M., Blodgett, Janet C., Juarez, Angelica, Jokela, Ritva, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Torkki, Paulus
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BENCHMARKING (Management) ,SCIENCE databases ,WEB databases ,BEST practices ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: Reliable benchmarking in Lean healthcare requires widely relevant and applicable domains for outcome metrics and careful attention to contextual levels. These levels have been poorly defined and no framework to facilitate performance benchmarking exists.Methods: We systematically searched the Pubmed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases to identify original articles reporting benchmarking on different contextual levels in Lean healthcare and critically appraised the articles. Scarcity and heterogeneity of articles prevented quantitative meta-analyses. We developed a new, widely applicable conceptual framework for benchmarking drawing on the principles of ten commonly used healthcare quality frameworks and four value statements, and suggest an agenda for future research on benchmarking in Lean healthcare.Results: We identified 22 articles on benchmarking in Lean healthcare on 4 contextual levels: intra-organizational (6 articles), regional (4), national (10), and international (2). We further categorized the articles by the domains in the proposed conceptual framework: patients (6), employed and affiliated staff (2), costs (2), and service provision (16). After critical appraisal, only one fifth of the articles were categorized as high quality.Conclusions: When making evidence-informed decisions based on current scarce literature on benchmarking in healthcare, leaders and managers should carefully consider the influence of context. The proposed conceptual framework may facilitate performance benchmarking and spreading best practices in Lean healthcare. Future research on benchmarking in Lean healthcare should include international benchmarking, defining essential factors influencing Lean initiatives on different levels of context; patient-centered benchmarking; and system-level benchmarking with a balanced set of outcomes and quality measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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4. A pilot study of parents' experiences of reflexology treatment for infants with colic in Finland.
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Hannula, Leena, Puukka, Pauli, Asunmaa, Marjut, and Mäkijärvi, Markku
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REFLEXOTHERAPY ,SLEEP ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PILOT projects ,EMPIRICAL research ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PARENT attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INFANTILE colic ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Many infants under 4 months suffer from infantile colic. Infants with colic cry a lot, appear to be in pain, and it is difficult to sooth them. Colic is a painful condition for the infant and very stressful to parents. Parents in Finland get advice to try reflexology treatment for their infant, but there are no studies in Finland to support this advice. Aim: The aim of the pilot study was to treat infants with reflexology and find out parents' experiences of the effects of the treatment on colic symptoms and parental stress. Method: A total of 33 parents of 35 infants diagnosed with colic participated to the pilot study. Three certified reflexologists with health care education background and extensive experience in infant reflexology were trained to give the reflexology treatment in a standardised manner. They treated each infant 3–4 times. The whole body reflexology treatment session consisted of gentle pressure treatment of soles and feet, hands, head, face, ears, back, neck and whole stomach area. One treatment session lasted about 20–30 minutes, and treatments were delivered within 8–12 days. The data were collected from the parents with semi‐structured questionnaires. Results: The series of the treatments helped reduce the suffering of all the babies with infant colic. The colic symptoms disappeared on 43% of infants and decreased on the remaining 57%. The parents reported having pleasant experiences with the treatment, regardless whether the colic symptoms disappeared or continued. Parents stated that the treatment reduced the most typical colic symptoms; infants' body tension, colic crying and restless movements, poor sleep quality and irregular bowel movements. Conclusions: Reflexology treatment seems to be a safe and effective way to treat infants with colic when conducted by a health care professional with reflexology training and experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Anticoagulation therapy among patients presenting to the emergency department with symptomatic atrial fibrillation -- the FinFib2 study.
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Penttilä, Tero, Mäkynen, Heikki, Hartikainen, Juha, Lauri, Timo, Lehtod, Mika, Lund, Juha, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Raatikainen, Pekka
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- 2017
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6. Transcardiac gradients of N-terminal B-type natriuretic peptide in aortic valve stenosis
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Kupari, Markku, Turto, Heikki, Lommi, Jyri, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Parikka, Hannu, and Mäkijärvi, Markku
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ATRIAL natriuretic peptides ,HEART diseases ,CATHETERIZATION ,CORONARY arteries ,AORTIC valve diseases ,CARDIAC surgery ,HEART failure ,CARDIAC arrest - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Plasma B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), as well as the N-terminal part of the prohormone (Nt-BNP), are frequently elevated in aortic valve stenosis (AS). Yet, their release from the heart into the circulation has never been directly studied in AS. Aim: To assess the release of Nt-BNP in AS with focus on the identification of its main determinants. Methods: We studied 49 adult patients undergoing preoperative cardiac catheterization for isolated AS. Blood was sampled from the aortic root and the coronary sinus for Nt-BNP determination by immunoassay. Results: The mean (±S.E.) transcardiac Nt-BNP step-up averaged 79±53 pmol/l in 11 control patients free of structural heart disease, 75±32 pmol/l in 31 AS patients free of heart failure (HF), 236±62 pmol/l in 8 AS patients with diastolic HF (ejection fraction ≥50%, pulmonary wedge pressure >14 mm Hg) and 469±66 pmol/l in 7 AS patients with systolic HF (ejection fraction <50%, wedge pressure >14 mm Hg) (p<0.001). The transcardiac Nt-BNP gradient was independently associated with left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic pressure (β=0.47, p<0.001) and ejection fraction (β=−0.29, p<0.019) and with co-existent coronary artery disease (β=0.23, p=0.050). Conclusion: LV diastolic and systolic dysfunction along with coronary artery disease are likely to be the key determinants of cardiac Nt-BNP release in AS. The transcardiac Nt-BNP gradient increases on average three-fold with the development of diastolic HF and six-fold in systolic HF. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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7. Temporal analysis of the depolarization wave of healed myocardial infarction in body surface potential mapping.
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Vesterinen, Paula, Hänninen, Helena, Karvonen, Milla, Lauerma, Kirsi, Holmström, Miia, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Väänänen, Heikki, Nenonen, Jukka, Katila, Toivo, Toivonen, Lauri, Hänninen, Helena, Holmström, Miia, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Väänänen, Heikki
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MYOCARDIAL infarction ,ELECTRIC properties of hearts ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,BODY surface mapping ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: We studied the ability of different time segments of the depolarization wave recorded with body surface potential mapping (BSPM) to detect and localize myocardial infarction (MI).Methods: BSPM was recorded in 24 patients with remote MI and in 24 healthy controls. Cine and contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used as a reference method. Patients were grouped according to anatomical location of their MI. The QRS complex was divided into six temporally equal segments, for which time integrals were calculated.Results: The time segments of the QRS complex showed different MI detection capability depending on MI location. For anterior infarction the second segment of the QRS complex was the best in MI detection and the optimal area was on the right inferior quadrant of the thorax (time integral average -1.5 +/- 1.8 mVms patients, 1.0 +/- 1.6 mVms controls, P = 0.002). For lateral infarction the first segment of the QRS complex performed best and the optimal area for MI detection was the left fourth intercostal area (time integral average 1.8 +/- 1.0 mVms patients, 0.7 +/- 0.5 mVms controls, P = 0.024). For inferior and posterior MI the mid-phases of the QRS complex were the best and the optimal area was the mid-inferior area of the thorax (time integral average -6.2 +/- 8.3 mVms patients, 3.3 +/- 4.3 mVms controls, P = 0.002; -9.1 +/- 6.1 mVms patients, 0.6 +/- 7.1 mVms controls, P = 0.001, respectively).Conclusions: Time segment analysis of the depolarization wave offers potential for improving the detection and localization of healed MI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2004
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8. Late QRS activity in signal-averaged magnetocardiography, body surface potential mapping, and orthogonal ECG in postinfarction ventricular tachycardia patients.
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Korhonen, Petri, Tierala, Ilkka, Simelius, Kim, Väänänen, Heikki, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Nenonen, Jukka, Katila, Toivo, Toivonen, Lauri, Väänänen, Heikki, and Mäkijärvi, Markku
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Background: Delayed electrical activity necessary for re-entrant ventricular tachycardia (VT) is detectable noninvasively with high resolution techniques. We compared high resolution signal-averaged analysis of magnetocardiography (MCG), body surface potential mapping (BSPM), and orthogonal three-lead ECG (SA-ECG) in the identification of patients prone to VT after myocardial infarction (MI).Methods: Patients with remote myocardial infarction and cardiac dysfunction were studied, 22 with (VT group) and 22 without VT (control group). MCG with seven channels and BSPM with 63 and SA-ECG with three orthogonal leads were registered. After signal-averaging and highpass filtering, three time domain analysis (TDA) parameters describing late electrical activity were computed: QRS duration (QRSd), root mean square amplitude (RMS) of the last 40 ms of QRS, and the duration of the low-amplitude QRS end (LAS).Results: All parameters by each method were significantly different between the patients' groups. For example, LAS parameter in MCG was 59 (SD 22) ms in the VT group vs. 37 (SD 13) ms in controls (P < 0.001), 77 (SD 22) ms vs. 56 (SD 19) ms in BSPM (P = 0.002), and 60 (SD 24) ms vs. 39 (SD 22) ms in SA-ECG (P = 0.005). The combination of LAS parameter in MCG and SA-ECG resulted in improved performance in comparison to any single parameter with 95% sensitivity and 68% specificity.Conclusions: All three high resolution methods identified VT propensity among post-MI patients with cardiac dysfunction and between-method differences were small. Information in MCG and SA-ECG may be complementary and their combination could be of value in postinfarction arrhythmia risk assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2002
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9. Magnetocardiography.
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Mäkijärvi, Markku, Korhonen, Petri, Jurkko, Raija, Väänänen, Heikki, Siltanen, Pentti, and Hänninen, Helena
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- 2011
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10. THE STT INTEGRAL IN DETECTION OF HEALED MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION ASSESSED WITH BODY SURFACE POTENTIAL MAPPING.
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VESTERINEN, PAULA, HÄNNINEN, HELENA, KARVONEN, MILLA, LAUERMA, KIRSI, HOLMSTRÖM, MIIA, MÄKIJÄRVI, MARKKU, VÄÄNÄNEN, HEIKKI, NENONEN, JUKKA, and TOIVONEN, LAURI
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MYOCARDIAL infarction ,BODY surface mapping ,CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,SURFACE potential - Published
- 2005
11. ABNORMAL LEFT ATRIAL DEPOLARIZATION WAVEFRONT IN PATIENTS WITH PAROXYSMAL ATRIAL FIBRILLATION ASSESSED WITH MAGNETOCARDIOGRAPHY.
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KOSKINEN, RAIJA, KARVONEN, MILLA, MÄNTYNEN, VILLE, VÄÄNÄNEN, HEIKKI, MÄKIJÄRVI, MARKKU, NENONEN, JUKKA, MONTONEN, JUHA, and TOIVONEN, LAURI
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ATRIAL fibrillation ,MAGNETOCARDIOGRAPHY ,DEPOLARIZATION (Cytology) ,ELECTRIC countershock ,MAGNETIC fields - Published
- 2005
12. Comparison of QT peak and QT end interval responses to autonomic adaptation in asymptomatic LQT1 mutation carriers.
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Haapalahti, Petri, Viitasalo, Matti, Perhonen, Merja, Väänänen, Heikki, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Swan, Heikki, and Toivonen, Lauri
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COMPARATIVE studies ,HEART physiology ,GENETIC mutation ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,POLARIZATION (Electricity) ,DISPERSION (Chemistry) ,PHYSIOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
LQT1 subtype of long QT syndrome is characterized by defective I, which is intrinsically stronger in the epicardium than in the midmyocardial region. Electrocardiographic QT peak and QT end intervals may reflect complete repolarization of epicardium and midmyocardial region of the ventricular wall, respectively. Repolarization abnormalities in LQT1 carriers may therefore be more easily detected in the QT peak intervals. Asymptomatic KCNQ1 mutation carriers (LQT1, n = 9) and unaffected healthy controls ( n = 8) were studied during Valsalva manoeuvre, mental stress, handgrip and supine exercise. Global QT peak and QT end intervals derived from 25 simultaneous electrocardiographic leads were measured beat to beat with an automated method. In unaffected subjects, the percentage shortening of QT peak was greater than that of QT end during mental stress and during the recovery phases of Valsalva and supine exercise. In LQT1 carriers, the percentage shortening of the intervals was similar. At the beginning of Valsalva strain under abrupt endogenous sympathetic activation, QT peak shortened in LQT1 but not in control patients yielding increased electrocardiographic transmural dispersion of repolarization in LQT1. In asymptomatic KCNQ1 mutation carriers, repolarization abnormalities are more evident in the QT peak than in the QT end interval during adrenergic adaptation, possibly related to transmural differences in the degree of I block. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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13. Fragmented QRS in Prediction of Cardiac Deaths and Heart Failure Hospitalizations after Myocardial Infarction.
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Korhonen, Petri, Husa, Terhi, Konttila, Teijo, Tierala, Ilkka, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Väänänen, Heikki, Ojanen, Janne, Vehtari, Aki, and Toivonen, Lauri
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Background: Increased QRS fragmentation in visual inspection of 12-lead ECG has shown association with cardiac events in postmyocardial infarction (MI) patients. We investigated user-independent computerized intra-QRS fragmentation analysis in prediction of cardiac deaths and heart failure (HF) hospitalizations after MI. Methods: Patients (n = 158) with recent MI and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) were studied. A 120-lead body surface potential mapping was performed at hospital discharge. Intra-QRS fragmentation was computed as the number of extrema (fragmentation index FI) in QRS. QRS duration (QRSd) was computed for comparison. Results: During a mean follow-up of 50 months 15 patients suffered cardiac death and 23 were hospitalized for HF. Using the mean + 1 SD as cut-point both parameters were univariate predictors of both end-points. In multivariate analysis including age, gender, LVEF, previous MI, bundle branch block, atrial fibrillation, and diabetes FI was an independent predictor for cardiac deaths (HR 8.7, CI 3.0–25.6) and HF hospitalizations (HR 3.8, CI 1.6–9.3) whereas QRSd only predicted HF hospitalizations (HR 4.6, CI 2.0–10.7). In comparison to QRSd, FI showed better positive (PPA) and equal negative (NPA) predictive accuracy for both end-points, and PPA was further improved when combined to LVEF < 40%. Limiting fragmentation analysis to 12-lead ECG or a randomly selected 8-lead set instead of all 120 leads resulted in an almost similar prediction. Conclusions: Increased QRS fragmentation in post-MI patients predicts cardiac deaths and HF progression. A computer-based fragmentation analysis is a stronger predictor than QRSd. Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol 2010;15(2):130–137 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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14. Interatrial right-to-left conduction in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.
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Tapanainen JM, Jurkko R, Holmqvist F, Husser D, Kongstad O, Mäkijärvi M, Toivonen L, Platonov PG, Tapanainen, Jari M, Jurkko, Raija, Holmqvist, Fredrik, Husser, Daniela, Kongstad, Ole, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Toivonen, Lauri, and Platonov, Pyotr G
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Purpose: We wanted to illustrate the right-to-left impulse propagation routes during sinus in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF), as alterations in conduction patterns have been linked to the pathogenesis of PAF, and as no large patient materials have been published.Methods: Patients underwent 3-D electroanatomical contact mapping prior to catheter ablation. The site of the earliest left atrial (LA) activation was determined.Results: Three different interatrial routes were identified, either as solitary pathways (36/50 patients, 72%) or in their combinations (14/50). Bachmann's bundle (BB) was involved in the majority of the cases with solitary routes (25/36). More seldom, impulse propagation occurred near the oval fossa (FO) (7/36) or the coronary sinus ostium (4/36). In patients with combined routes, both the BB (10/14) and FO routes (11/14) were included in most cases.Conclusions: In PAF patients, LA can be activated during sinus rhythm through three distinct connections, either encompassing a single route or via any combination of these connections. In one third, the earliest LA activation occurs outside BB. The knowledge of the propagation patterns may give insight into the pathophysiology of PAF and into refining ablation therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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15. Complex T-wave morphology in body surface potential mapping in prediction of arrhythmic events in patients with acute myocardial infarction and cardiac dysfunction.
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Korhonen, Petri, Husa, Terhi, Konttila, Teijo, Tierala, Ilkka, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Väänänen, Heikki, and Toivonen, Lauri
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Aims: Heterogeneous ventricular repolarization is associated with sudden cardiac death after myocardial infarction (MI). This prospective study investigated repolarization disparity with parameters based on T-wave morphology in body surface potential mapping (BSPM) in the assessment of arrhythmia risk in patients with a recent MI and cardiac dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2009
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16. Validation of the Lean Healthcare Implementation Self-Assessment Instrument (LHISI) in the finnish healthcare context.
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Reponen, Elina, Jokela, Ritva, Blodgett, Janet C, Rundall, Thomas G, Shortell, Stephen M, Nuutinen, Mikko, Skants, Noora, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Torkki, Paulus
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Background: Lean management is growing in popularity in the healthcare sector worldwide, yet healthcare organizations are struggling with assessing the maturity of their Lean implementation and monitoring its change over time. Most existing methods for such assessments are time consuming, require site visits by external consultants, and lack frontline involvement. The original Lean Healthcare Implementation Self-Assessment Instrument (LHISI) was developed by the Center for Lean Engagement and Research (CLEAR), University of California, Berkeley as a Lean principles-based survey instrument that avoids the above problems. We validated the original LHISI in the context of Finnish healthcare.Methods: The original HISI survey was sent over a secure organizational email system to the over 26,000 employees of the Hospital District of Helsinki and Uusimaa in March 2020. The data were randomly split with one part used to carry out an exploratory factor analysis (EFA), and the other for testing the resulting model using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA).Results: A total of 6073 employees responded to the LHISI survey, for an overall response rate of 23%. The results indicated that the 43 items used in the original LHISI can be reduced to 25 items, and these items measure a five-dimensional model of the progress of Lean implementation: leadership, commitment, standard work, communication, and daily management system. In comparison with a single-factor model, the fit measures for the 5-factor model were better: smaller X2, larger comparative fit index (CFI), smaller root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA), and smaller standardized root mean square residual (SRMR).Conclusions: The 25 item LHISI is valid and feasible to use in the context of Finnish healthcare. The LHISI allows the organization to self-monitor the progress of its Lean implementation and provides the leadership with actionable knowledge to guide the path towards Lean maturity across the organization. Our findings encourage further studies on the adoption and validation of the LHISI in healthcare organizations worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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17. High-Resolution Signal-Averaged Analysis of Atrial Electromagnetic Characteristics in Patients with Paroxysmal Lone Atrial Fibrillation.
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Jurkko, Raija, Väänänen, Heikki, Mäntynen, Ville, Kuusisto, Jouni, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Toivonen, Lauri
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Background: Abnormalities in the electromagnetic signal of the atria during sinus rhythm could serve as markers of triggering foci or substrate for atrial fibrillation (AF). We examined atrial electrophysiologic properties noninvasively by using magnetocardiographic mapping (MCG) in patients with paroxysmal lone AF to find whether any difference exists between those who have frequent triggers of AF and who don't. Methods: MCG was recorded over anterior chest during sinus rhythm in 80 patients with paroxysmal lone AF (44 ± 12 years, 61 males) and 80 matched controls. Atrial wave duration (Pd) and root mean square amplitudes of the last 40 ms (RMS40) of the averaged filtered atrial complex were determined automatically. Patients expressing atrial arrhythmias triggering AF episodes were classified as focal AF. Results: The Pd was 109 ms in patients and 104 ms in controls (P = 0.007). In focal AF (72%) the Pd was slightly prolonged and its proportion of the PR interval was larger, but RMS40 was normal compared to controls. In other patients, the Pd was close to controls, but the RMS40 was reduced (59 ± 17 vs74 ± 36 fT, P = 0.006). Pd and atrial RMS amplitudes were unrelated to duration of AF history or frequency of recurrences. Conclusion: Clinical subclasses of lone AF seem to possess distinct signal profiles of atrial depolarization. Differences in electrophysiological properties between these subclasses may reflect pathogenetic variation and could have implications on diagnostics and therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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18. Electrocardiographic interventricular dispersion of repolarization during autonomic adaptation in LQT1 subtype of long QT syndrome.
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Haapalahti, Petri, Viitasalo, Matti, Perhonen, Merja, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Väänänen, Heikki, Oikarinen, Lasse, Salorinne, Yrjö, Swan, Heikki, and Toivonen, Lauri
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ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,ARRHYTHMIA ,HEART disease diagnosis ,HEART ventricles ,GENETIC mutation - Abstract
Objectives. In LQT1 subtype of inherited long QT syndrome, repolarization abnormalities originating from defective IKs render patients vulnerable to ventricular arrhythmia during sudden sympathetic activation. Experimental studies show lower IKs density and longer action potential duration in left (LV) than in right (RV) ventricle. We studied interventricular dispersion of repolarization in patients with IKs defect during autonomic tests. Design. We measured interventricular (difference of QT intervals between LV and RV type leads) and transmural electrocardiographic dispersion of repolarization from 25-lead electrocardiograms in nine asymptomatic KCNQ1 mutation carriers (LQT1) and eight controls during rest, Valsalva maneuver, mental stress, sustained handgrip and supine exercise. Results. LQT1 carriers showed increased interventricular dispersion of repolarization (13±9 ms vs. 4±4 ms, p=0.03) during all tests. Valsalva strain increased the difference between the study groups. In LQT1 carriers, interventricular dispersion of repolarization correlated weakly with electrocardiographic transmural dispersion of repolarization. Conclusions. Asymptomatic KCNQ1 mutation carriers exhibit increased and by abrupt sympathetic activation augmented interventricular difference in electrocardiographic repolarization times. Interventricular and transmural repolarization dispersion behave similarly in patients with IKs defect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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19. Single-Lead Electrocardiographic Variables in the Detection of Prior Myocardial Infarction with Respect to Q-Wave Status and Infarct Age.
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Vesterinen, Paula, Väänänen, Heikki, Hänninen, Helena, Korhonen, Petri, Tierala, Ilkka, Husa, Terhi, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Toivonen, Lauri
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MYOCARDIAL infarction ,CORONARY disease ,HEART diseases ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,INFARCTION - Abstract
Objectives: Conventionally, the detection of prior myocardial infarction (MI) is based on QRS abnormalities, which may ignore non-Q-wave MI (NQMI). We aimed at finding automatically applicable quantitative ECG variables for diagnosing prior MI. Methods: Body surface potential mapping (BSPM) was registered and automatically analyzed in 144 patients with prior MI and in 75 healthy controls. The MI was defined according to its age as recent or old, and Q-wave status as Q-wave MI (QMI) or NQMI. Results: The QRSSTT integral, the STT integral and the T-wave apex amplitude applied in single, selected leads were found to be the optimal parameters in the detection of prior MI. The areas under the receiver-operating characteristic curves (AUC) were 89% for each, and detection was equal in old and recent MI (AUCs from 87 to 90%), and in QMI and NQMI (AUCs from 88 to 90%). Conclusions: The quantitative, automatically applicable single-lead variables comprising ventricular repolarization was effective in detecting prior MI, irrespective of the time elapsed from MI or the Q-wave status. These variables could be suitable for population studies and health screening purposes and are applicable to automatic ECG diagnostics of prior MI. Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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20. Ventricular Repolarization and Heart Rate Responses During Cardiovascular Autonomic Function Testing in LQT1 Subtype of Long QT Syndrome.
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HAAPALAHTI, PETRI, VIITASALO, MATTI, PERHONEN, MERJA, MÄKIJÄRVI, MARKKU, VÄÄNÄNEN, HEIKKI, OIKARINEN, LASSE, HEKKALA, ANNA‐MARI, SALORINNE, YRJÖ, SWAN, HEIKKI, and TOIVONEN, LAURI
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LONG QT syndrome ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,HEART beat ,AUTONOMIC nervous system ,GENETIC mutation - Abstract
Background: In the most prevalent LQT1 form of inherited long QT syndrome symptoms often occur during abrupt physical or emotional stress. Sympathetic stimulation aggravates repolarization abnormalities in experimental LQT1 models. We hypothesized that autonomic function tests might reveal the abnormal repolarization in asymptomatic LQT1 patients. Methods: We measured heart rates (HRs) and QT intervals in nine asymptomatic carriers of a C-terminal KCNQ1 mutation and 8 unaffected healthy subjects using an approach of global QT values derived from 28 simultaneous electrocardiographic leads on beat-to-beat base during Valsalva maneuver, mental stress, sustained handgrip, and light supine exercise. Results: LQT1 patients exhibited impaired shortening of both QTpeak and QTend intervals during autonomic interventions but exaggerated lengthening of the intervals—a QT overshoot—during the recovery phases. The number of tests with a QT overshoot was 2.4 ± 1.7 in LQT1 patients and 0.8 ± 0.7 in unaffected subjects (P = 0.02). Valsalva strain prolonged T wave peak to T wave end interval (TPE) in LQT1 but not in unaffected patients. LQT1 patients showed diminished HR acceleration in response to adrenergic challenge whereas HR responses to vagal stimuli were similar in both groups. Conclusions: Standard cardiovascular autonomic provocations induce a QT interval overshoot during recovery in asymptomatic KCNQ1 mutation carriers. Valsalva maneuver causes an exaggerated fluctuation of QT and TPE intervals partly explaining the occurrence of cardiac events during abrupt bursts of autonomic activity in LQT1 patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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21. QRS Duration in High-Resolution Methods and Standard ECG in Risk Assessment After First and Recurrent Myocardial Infarctions.
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KORHONEN, PETRI, HUSA, TERHI, TIERALA, ILKKA, VÄÄNÄNEN, HEIKKI, MÄKIJÄRVI, MARKKU, KATILA, TOIVO, and TOIVONEN, LAURI
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ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,ARRHYTHMIA ,HEART diseases ,ISCHEMIA - Abstract
Background: Prolonged QRS duration (QRSd) is associated with increased mortality after myocardial infarction (MI). Only little data exist about its predictive ability and relationships to clinical variables in the present era of active treatment of myocardial ischemia and cardiac dysfunction. We investigated whether QRSd in high-resolution methods and standard ECG predict arrhythmic events and cardiac death in post-infarction patients with cardiac dysfunction and how it relates to clinical variables, with a special emphasis on history of previous MI. Methods and Results: Patients (n = 158) with acute MI and cardiac dysfunction had magnetocardiography (MCG), signal-averaged ECG (SAECG), and ECG registered at discharge. Patients with a previous MI had significantly longer QRSd although their left ventricular function was almost similarly impaired. During the mean follow-up of 50 ± 15 (range 1–72) months, 32 patients died and 17 (53%) of the deaths were classified as cardiac. Eighteen patients had an arrhythmic event. QRSd >121 ms in MCG and >114 ms in SAECG were significant predictors of arrhythmic events and cardiac death, whereas QRSd in ECG predicted only cardiac death. In multivariate analysis, QRSd in MCG (hazard ratio (HR) = 3.6, P = 0.007) and SAECG (HR = 4.6, P = 0.016) predicted only arrhythmic events, whereas QRSd in ECG was an independent predictor of cardiac death. Conclusions: Prolonged QRSd in MCG and SAECG are powerful indicators of the arrhythmia substrate in post-infarction patients with cardiac dysfunction, whereas prolonged QRSd in standard ECG associates with increased risk of cardiac death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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22. Magnetocardiographic assessment of healed myocardial infarction.
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Hänninen H, Holmström M, Vesterinen P, Karvonen M, Väänänen H, Oikarinen L, Mäkijärvi M, Nenonen J, Lauerma K, Katila T, Toivonen L, Hänninen, Helena, Holmström, Miia, Vesterinen, Paula, Karvonen, Milla, Väänänen, Heikki, Oikarinen, Lasse, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Nenonen, Jukka, and Lauerma, Kirsi
- Abstract
Background: We evaluated the capability of multichannel magnetocardiography (MCG) to detect healed myocardial infarction (MI).Methods: Multichannel MCG over frontal chest was recorded at rest in 21 patients with healed MI, detected by cine- and contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, and in 26 healthy controls. Of the 21 MI patients, 11 had non-Q wave and 10 Q wave MIs. QRS, ST-segment, T wave and ST-T wave integrals, ST-segment and T wave amplitudes, and QRS and ST-T wave magnetic field map orientations were measured.Results: The MCG repolarization indexes, such as ST segment and ST-T wave integrals, separated the MI group from the controls (ST-T wave integral -1.4 +/- 5.3 vs 1.5 +/- 4.7 pTs, P = 0.034). The abnormalities were more distinct in the Q wave-MI than in the non-Q wave MI subgroup. In the latter, however, a trend similar to the Q wave MI group was found. The relation of QRS area to ST segment and T wave integral improved the detection of healed MIs compared to the ST-T wave indexes alone (QRS-ST-T discordance 14 +/- 10 vs 5.0 +/- 7.1 pTs, P = 0.003). When comparing the MI group to the controls, the orientation of the magnetic field maps differed in the ST-T wave maps (163 +/- 119 degrees vs 58 +/- 17 degrees, P < 0.001) but not in the QRS maps (111 +/- 95 degrees vs 106 +/-93 degrees, P = 0.646).Conclusions: The MCG repolarization variables can detect healed MI. These ST-T wave abnormalities are more pronounced in patients with Q wave MI than in patients with non-Q wave MIs. Relating the signals of depolarization and repolarization phases improves the detection of healed MI. Repolarization abnormalities are common in healed MI and thus should not always be interpreted as present ongoing ischemia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
23. Magnetocardiographic Assessment of Healed Myocardial Infarction.
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Hänninen, Helena, Holmström, Miia, Vesterinen, Paula, Karvonen, Milla, Väänänen, Heikki, Oikarinen, Lasse, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Nenonen, Jukka, Lauerma, Kirsi, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
- Subjects
CARDIOGRAPHY ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,ISCHEMIA ,MAGNETIC fields - Abstract
Background: We evaluated the capability of multichannel magnetocardiography (MCG) to detect healed myocardial infarction (MI). Methods: Multichannel MCG over frontal chest was recorded at rest in 21 patients with healed MI, detected by cine- and contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, and in 26 healthy controls. Of the 21 MI patients, 11 had non-Q wave and 10 Q wave MIs. QRS, ST-segment, T wave and ST-T wave integrals, ST-segment and T wave amplitudes, and QRS and ST-T wave magnetic field map orientations were measured. Results: The MCG repolarization indexes, such as ST segment and ST-T wave integrals, separated the MI group from the controls (ST-T wave integral vs , ). The abnormalities were more distinct in the Q wave-MI than in the non-Q wave MI subgroup. In the latter, however, a trend similar to the Q wave MI group was found. The relation of QRS area to ST segment and T wave integral improved the detection of healed MIs compared to the ST-T wave indexes alone (QRS-ST-T discordance ). When comparing the MI group to the controls, the orientation of the magnetic field maps differed in the ST-T wave maps but not in the QRS maps . Conclusions: The MCG repolarization variables can detect healed MI. These ST-T wave abnormalities are more pronounced in patients with Q wave MI than in patients with non-Q wave MIs. Relating the signals of depolarization and repolarization phases improves the detection of healed MI. Repolarization abnormalities are common in healed MI and thus should not always be interpreted as present ongoing ischemia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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24. Increased Intra-QRS Fragmentation in Magnetocardiography as a Predictor of Arrhythmic Events and Mortality in Patients with Cardiac Dysfunction After Myocardial Infarction.
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KORHONEN, PETRI, HUSA, TERHI, TIERALA, ILKKA, VÄÄNÄNEN, HEIKKI, MÄKIJÄRVI, MARKKU, KATILA, TOIVO, and TOIVONEN, LAURI
- Subjects
ARRHYTHMIA ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,LEFT heart ventricle ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,MORTALITY ,HEART diseases - Abstract
Introduction: Increased intra-QRS fragmentation score (FRA) in magnetocardiography (MCG) has shown association with sustained ventricular arrhythmias in post-MI patients suggesting its relation to arrhythmia substrate. The aim of this study was to investigate whether increased FRA in MCG predicts arrhythmic events and mortality after acute myocardial infarction (MI) with cardiac dysfunction. Methods and Results: A series of 158 patients with acute MI and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) <50% were studied. Their age was 60 ± 10 years and LVEF 40 ± 6%. MCG was registered and FRA was computed. For comparison, QRS duration in 12-lead ECG was measured. In a mean follow-up of 50 ± 15 months, 32 (20%) patients died and 18 (11%) had an arrhythmic event. Both arrhythmic event rate and all-cause mortality were significantly higher in patients with increased FRA (P < 0.001 for both). In contrast, increased QRS duration in ECG predicted all-cause mortality (P < 0.05) but not arrhythmic events. In multivariate analysis, FRA was an independent predictor of both arrhythmic events and all-cause mortality. Using a combined criterion of increased FRA and LVEF < 30% yielded positive and negative predictive accuracies of 50% and 91% for arrhythmic events. Conclusion: In post-MI patients with left ventricular dysfunction, increased intra-QRS fragmentation in high-resolution magnetocardiography predicts arrhythmic events, whereas QRS duration in 12-lead ECG predicts all-cause mortality. Analysis of intra-QRS fragmentation by MCG may assist in guiding therapy of post-MI patients, for example, by selecting those who would benefit most from prophylactic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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25. Magnetocardiographic indices of left ventricular hypertrophy.
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Karvonen, Milla, Oikarinen, Lasse, Takala, Panu, Kaartinen, Maija, Rossinen, Juhani, Hänninen, Helena, Montonen, Juha, Nenonen, Jukka, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Keto, Pekka, Toivonen, Lauri, Nieminen, Markku S, and Katila, Toivo
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- 2002
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26. Relation of Magnetocardiographic Arrhythmia Risk Parameters to Delayed Ventricular Conduction in Postinfarction Ventricular Tachycardia.
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Korhonen, Petri, Pesola, Katja, Järvinen, Antero, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Tqivo Katila, and Toivonen, Lauri
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ARRHYTHMIA ,TACHYCARDIA ,HEART diseases ,HEART beat ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,CORONARY disease - Abstract
Time-domain late field and intra-QRS fragmentation parameters in magnetocardiography (MCG) identify patients prone to VT after myocardial infarction. This study investigated if they are related to slow ventricular conduction and affected by arrhythmia surgery. Twenty-two patients with old myocardial infarction undergoing map-guided subendocardial resection to treat sustained VT were included. Bipolar electrograms were recorded during operation using an epicardial jacket and endocardial balloon electrode array. The time from the QRS onset to the end of local ventricular excitation in each electrogram was measured during sinus rhythm. Multichannel MCG was recorded before and after operation and filtered QBS duration (QRSd), root mean square amplitude of the magnetic field strength during the last 40 ms of the QRS complex (RMS
40 ) duration of the low amplitude signal < 300 fT (LAS300 ), fragmentation index M (M), and fragmentation score S (S) were determined. All patients had one or two VT foci localized and resected. MCG parameters correlated with time to the latest end of ventricular excitation; r = 0.45 for QRSd (P = 0.035), r = 0.64 for M (P = 0.001), and r = 0.73 for S (P < 0.001). The correlations were even better in patients with anterior infarction (e.g., r = 0.87 for QRSd, P < 0.001; r = 0.91 for M, P < 0.001). The operation reduced the abnormalities in MGG parameters and 20 of the 21 patients tested postoperatively became noninducible. MCG parameters indicating postinfarction arrhythmia propensity are related to delayed ventricular conduction. Abolition of the arrhythmia substrate reverses the abnormality of these parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2002
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27. Features of ST segment and T-wave in exercise-induced myocardial ischemia evaluated with multichannel magnetocardiography.
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Hänninen, Helena, Takala, Panu, Korhonen, Petri, Oikarinen, Lasse, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Nenonen, Jukka, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
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CARDIOGRAPHY ,CORONARY disease ,HEART diseases ,ANGIOGRAPHY ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM. Magnetocardiography (MCG) is a novel, non-contact mapping technique to record cardiac magnetic field. We evaluated MCG criteria for myocardial ischemia in stress testing. METHODS. Multichannel MCG over frontal chest was performed in 44 patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and 26 healthy controls during supine bicycle exercise test. Of the 44 patients 16 had anterior, 15 posterior, and 13 inferior ischemia documented by coronary angiography and exercise thallium scintigraphy. ST amplitude, ST slope, T-wave amplitude, and ST-T integral were measured. The optimal sites for detecting the ischemiainduced changes on MCG were sought. The orientation of the magnetic field was also determined. RESULTS. The optimal sites for the decrease of ST slope, ST amplitude, T-wave amplitude, and ST-T integral were over the abdomen. The reciprocal increase of these parameters was found over the left parasternal area. The optimal sites were approximately the same for all patient groups. In single-vessel disease patients without previous myocardial infarction (MI), ST slope increase and ST elevation performed the best (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 92% and 90%, respectively). In post-MI patients with triple-vessel disease the decrease of T-wave amplitude and ST slope performed the best (area under curve 91%, for both). The magnetic field orientation at ST segment performed equally well as the other ST parameters. In stepwise logistic regression analysis, by use of the presence of CAD as the dependent parameter, ST slope increase and ST peak gradient orientation entered the model. CONCLUSIONS: Various ST segment and T-wave parameters detect ischemia in MCG. ST amplitude performs especially well in non-MI patients with less severe CAD. In advanced CAD late development of T-wave amplitude might be more sensitive to ischemia than ST amplitude. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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28. Postmyocardial Infarction Patients Susceptible to Ventricular Tachycardia Show Increased T Wave Dispersion Independent of Delayed Ventricular Conduction.
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Oikarinen, Lasse, Viitasalo, Matti, Korhonen, Petri, Väänänen, Heikki, Hänninen, Helena, Montonen, Juha, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
- Subjects
VENTRICULAR tachycardia ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,HEART conduction system ,TACHYCARDIA ,ARRHYTHMIA - Abstract
Introduction: Experimentally, both delayed ventricular conduction and nonhomogeneous ventricular repolarization contribute to reentrant arrhythmias. We tested the hypothesis that increased T wave dispersion is independent of delayed ventricular conduction associated with arrhythmia vulnerability in postmyocardial infarction (post-MI) patients. Methods and Results: We studied 32 post-MI patients with clinical or inducible monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT group), 28 post-MI patients without arrhythmias (MI group), and 13 healthy controls, using magnetocardiographic (MCG) mapping with signal averaging. Twelve-lead ECG was the reference. Filtered QRS duration (fQRS) and T wave peak to T wave end interval (TPE) were used as measures of ventricular conduction and nonhomogeneity in ventricular repolarization, respectively. In MCG, the VT group showed the longest fQRS (135 ± 34 msec vs 114 ± 22 msec in the MI group: P = 0.012). Mean TPE and maximum TPE in VT versus MI groups were 78 ± 9 msec versus 70 ± 6 msec (P < 0.001) and 117 ± 23 msec versus 104 ± 19 msec (P = 0.020), respectively. Maximum TPE did not correlate with fQRS in the VT group (r = 0.063; P = NS) but did correlate in the MI group (r = 0.396; P = 0.037). For identification of post-MI patients prone to VT, selection of cutoff values for fQRS > 140 msec and mean TPE >81 msec gave sensitivity and specificity of 41% and 89%, and 31% and 96%, respectively. Their combination increased sensitivity to 63% while maintaining 89% specificity. Conclusion: Post-MI patients susceptible to VT show increased T wave dispersion independent of delayed ventricular conduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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29. Magnetocardiographic Intra-QRS Fragmentation Analysis in the Identification of Patients with Sustained Ventricular Tachycardia after Myocardial Infarction.
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Korhonen, Petri, Montonen, Juha, Endt, Peter, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Trahms, Lutz, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
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TACHYCARDIA ,ARRHYTHMIA ,HEART diseases ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,CORONARY arteries ,MEDICAL sciences - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate if magnetocardiographic (MCG) analysis of cardiac micropotentials within the QRS complex can identity patients prone to ventricular arrhythmias, and to compare it to MCG time-domain, late-field analysis. The study population consisted of 136 patients with remote MI, 53 with and 83 without a history of VT. After averaging and high pass filtering of multichannel MCG signals, time-domain parameters describing the end-QRS activity and fragmentation index M and score S describing the whole QRS complex were computed. Fragmentation and time-domain parameters differed between the VT and control groups: fragmentation index M was 12 ± 3 versus 9 ± 2 (P < 0.001), fragmentation score S was 83 ± 42 versus 56 ± 21 (P < 0.001), and filtered QRS duration was 144 ± 32 versus 114 ± 19 ms (P < 0.001) in VT and control groups, respectively. A combination of fragmentation parameters yielded 87% sensitivity and 61 % specificity in VT identification. Corresponding figures for a time-domain parameter combination were 81% and 72%. Sensitivity of time-domain analysis was 88% and specificity was 75% in a subgroup with anterior Ml. In multivariate analysis, fragmentation and time-domain analyses discriminated VT patients from controls independently of the extent of coronary artery disease or left ventricular dysfunction. MCG in postinfarction patients reveals pathology associated with propensity to ventricular arrhythmias inside and not only at the end of the QRS complex. MGC seems most accurate in the anterior infarct location. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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30. Repolarization Abnormalities Detected by Magnetocardiography in Patients with Dilated Cardiomyopathy and Ventricular Arrhythmias.
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Korhonen, Petri, Väänänen, Heikki, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
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CARDIOMYOPATHIES ,VENTRICULAR tachycardia ,TACHYCARDIA ,HEART diseases ,CARDIAC patients - Abstract
Introduction: Abnormal repolarization is one of the acknowledged mechanisms leading to malignant ventricular arrhythmias. We used a novel magnetocardiographic technique to investigate the role of inhomogeneous repolarization in patients with nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy prone to sustained ventricular arrhythmias. Methods and Results: Forty-nine dilated cardiomyopathy patients were studied, 18 with a history of sustained ventricular tachycardia (n = 6) or ventricular fibrillation (n = 12) and 31 with no ventricular arrhythmias. The magnetocardiogram was registered and QT apex and QT end intervals were determined by a computer algorithm. Inhomogeneity of repolarization was characterized with indices describing QT apex and QT end dispersion, and T wave end duration. In addition, time-domain late fields of the QRS complex in magnetocardiography and QT dispersion in 12-lead ECG were determined. T wave end was longer in the arrhythmia group in patients with sinus rhythm (87 ± 15 msec vs 73 ± 12 msec; P = 0.005) and in those not having bundle branch block. Magnetocardiographic late fields of the QRS complex were not different between groups. QT apex and end dispersion on magnetocardiography or 12-lead ECG showed no difference. Conclusion: Prolongation of the end part of the T wave revealed by magnetocardiography is related to malignant ventricular arrhythmias in dilated cardiomyopathy. The results suggest that abnormal repolarization rather than delayed conduction underlies the arrhythmias in this disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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31. Recording locations in multichannel magnetocardiography and body surface potential mapping sensitive for regional exercise-induced myocardial ischemia.
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Hänninen, Helena, Takala, Panu, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Montonen, Juha, Korhonen, Petri, Oikarinen, Lasse, Simelius, Kim, Nenonen, Jukka, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
- Subjects
CORONARY disease ,CARDIOGRAPHY ,BODY surface mapping ,ISCHEMIA ,ELECTROMAGNETIC theory ,PHYSIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
Introduction This study aimed to identify the optimal locations in multichannel magnetocardiography (MCG) and body surface potential mapping (BSPM) to detect exercise-induced myocardial ischemia. Methods We studied 17 healthy controls and 24 coronary artery disease (CAD) patients with stenosis in one of the main coronary artery branches: left anterior descending (LAD) in 11 patients, right (RCA) in 7 patients, and left circumflex (LCX) in 6 patients. MCG and BSPM signals were recorded during a supine bicycle stress test. The capability of a recording location to separate the groups was quantified by subtracting the mean signal amplitude of the normal group from that of the patient group during the ST segment and at the T-wave apex, and dividing the resulting amplitude difference by the corresponding standard deviation within all subjects. Results In MCG the optimal location for ST depression was at the right inferior grid for the RCA, at the mid-inferior grid for the LCX, and in the middle of these locations for the LAD subgroup (mean ST amplitudes: CAD -80 ± 360fT, controls 610 ± 660fT; p < 0.001). In BSPM it was on the left upper anterior thorax for the LAD, left lower anterior thorax for the RCA, and on the lower back for the LCX subgroup (mean ST amplitudes: CAD -39 ± 61 μV and controls 38 ± 38 μV; p < 0.001). In MCG the optimal site for T-wave amplitude decrease was the same as the one for the ST depression. In BSPM it was on the middle front for the LAD, on the back for the LCX and on the left abdominal area for the RCA group. In accordance with electromagnetic theory, the largest ST segment and T-wave amplitude changes took place in MCG in locations orthogonal to those in BSPM. Conclusion This study identified magnetocardiographic and BSPM recording locations which are sensitive for detecting transient myocardial ischemia by evaluation of the ST segment as well as the T-wave. These locations strongly depend on ischemic regions and are outside the conventional 12-lead ECG recording sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
32. Magnetocardiographic and Electrocardiographic Exercise Mapping in Healthy Subjects.
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Takala, Panu, Hänninen, Helena, Montonen, Juha, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Nenonen, Jukka, Oikarinen, Lasse, Simelius, Kim, Toivonen, Lauri, and Katila, Toivo
- Abstract
In 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG), detection of myocardial ischemia is based on ST-segment changes in exercise testing. Magnetocardiography (MCG) is a complementary method to the ECG for a noninvasive study of the electric activity of the heart. In the MCG, ST-segment changes due to stress have also been found in healthy subjects. To further study the normal response to exercise, we performed MCG mappings in 12 healthy volunteers during supine bicycle ergometry. We also recorded body surface potential mappings (BSPM) with 123 channels using the same protocol. In this paper we compare, for the first time, multichannel MCG recorded in bicycle exercise testing with BSPM over the whole thorax in middle-aged healthy subjects. We quantified changes induced by the exercise in the MCG and BSPM with parameters based on signal amplitude, and correlation between signal distributions at rest and after exercise. At the ST-segment and T-wave apex, the exercise induced a magnetic field component outward the precordium and the minimum value of the MCG signal over the mapped area was found to be amplified. The response to exercise was smaller in the BSPM than in the MCG. A negative component in the MCG signal at the repolarization period of the cardiac cycle should be considered as a normal response to exercise. Therefore, maximum ST-segment depression over the mapped area in the MCG may not be an eligible parameter when evaluating the presence of ischemia. © 2001 Biomedical Engineering Society. PAC01: 8719Nn, 8719Hh, 8780Tq [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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33. Magnetocardiographic QT dispersion during cardiovascular autonomic function tests.
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Haapalahti, Petri, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Korhonen, Petri, Takala, Panu, Montonen, Juha, Salorinne, Yrjö, Oikarinen, Lasse, Viitasalo, Matti, and Toivonen, Lauri
- Subjects
NONINVASIVE diagnostic tests ,PATHOLOGICAL physiology ,NERVOUS system ,RESPIRATION ,AUTONOMIC nervous system ,NEUROSCIENCES - Abstract
QT dispersion is considered to reflect nonhomogeneity of ventricular repolarization. The autonomic nervous system modulates QT interval duration, but the effect may not be spatially homogenous. Magnetocardiography (MCG) registers the weak magnetik fields generated by myocardial electric currents with high localizing accuracy. We studied the effect of rapid cardiovascular autonomic nervous adjustment on QT dispersion in MCG. Ten healthy male volunteers were monitored during deep breathing, the Valsalva maneuver, sustained handgrip, hyperventilation, the cold pressor test and mental stress. 67 MCG channels and 12 ECG leads were recorded simultaneously. A computer algorithm was used for QT interval measurements. QT dispersion was defined as maximum – minimum or standard deviation of the QT
peak and QTend intervals. In MCG the QTend dispersion increased during deep inspiration compared with deep expiration (96±19 ms v 73±27 ms, p=0.05). Magnetic QT dispersion tended to increase during the bradycardia phase of the Valsalva maneuver, but the change was obvious only for QTend (55±26 ms v 76±29 ms, p<0.05) Other tests had no significant effect on QT dispersion, not even the cold pressor test, although it causes strong sympathetic activation. Magnetic and electric QTpeak and QTend intervals correlated closely (r=0.93 and 0.91), whereas the QT dispersion measures showed no correlation. In conclusion, magnetic QT dispersion is not modified by rapid changes in autonomic tone, but maneuvers involving deep respiratory efforts and changes in ventricular loading affect QT dispersion measurements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2000
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34. Late Fields of the Magnetocardiographic QRS Complex as Indicators of Propensity to Sustained Ventricular Tachycardia after Myocardial Infarction.
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Korhonen, Petri, Montonen, Juha, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Katila, Toivo, Nieminen, Markku S., and Toivonen, Lauri
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HEART disease diagnosis ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,VENTRICULAR tachycardia ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,CARDIOGRAPHY ,ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Introduction: Magnetocardiographic (MCG) mapping is a new method to record cardiac signals. This study examined the association of MCG late fields with the propensity to sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) after myocardial infarction (MI). Methods and Results: One hundred patients with remote MI were studied, 38 with and 62 without history of VT. High-resolution MCG and signal-averaged ECG (SAECG) as a comparative method were recorded. Time-domain parameters describing the abnormal low-amplitude end QRS activity, MCG late fields, and SAECG late potentials were analyzed. Late field parameters differed significantly between the patient groups: filtered QRS duration was 137 ± 26 msec in the VT group and 110 ± 18 msec in the control group (P < 0.001), and root mean square amplitude of the last 40 msec was 260 ± 170 and 510 ± 360 fT (P < 0.001), respectively. The optimal MCG parameter combination yielded a sensitivity of 92% and a specificity of 61% in classification to the VT group, whereas those for SAECG were 63% and 66%. In a subgroup of 63 patients with marked left ventricular dysfunction and comparable stage of coronary heart disease, only MCG (sensitivity 73%, specificity 67%) but not SAECG could assign a patient to the VT group. Conclusion: Late fields of the MCG QRS complex indicate propensity to life-threatening arrhythmias in post-MI patients. This discriminative ability persists in the presence of severe left ventricular dysfunction where ECG late potentials lose their informative value. MCG late field analysis is a potential new method for noninvasive risk assessment in post-Ml patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
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35. Detection of Exercise-Induced Myocardial Ischemia by Multichannel Magnetocardiography in Single Vessel Coronary Artery Disease.
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Hänninen, Helena, Takala, Panu, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Montonen, Juha, Korhonen, Petri, Oikarinen, Lasse, Nenonen, Jukka, Katila, Toivo, and Toivonen, Lauri
- Abstract
Background: Detection of myocardial ischemia was studied with multichannel exercise magneto-cardiography (MCG). A surface gradient method was applied to analyze cardiac magnetic fields. Methods: We studied 27 patients with single vessel coronary artery disease (CAD) and 17 healthy volunteers. The MCG was recorded over anterior chest during supine bicycle ergometry. The two-dimensional direction of the maximum spatial magnetic field gradient was determined during the ST segment and at the T-wave apex at different phases of stress test. Results: The CAD patient group was separated from controls by the orientation of the magnetic field gradient during the ST segment at cessation of exercise (CAD 167 ± 68° vs controls 106 ± 49°; P < 0.005) and at 4 minutes postexercise, but not at rest. The-CAD patient group was separated from controls also by the orientation of the magnetic field gradient at the T-wave apex at 4 minutes postexercise (CAD 87 ± 60° vs controls 58 ± 18° P < 0.05), but not at rest. The change in the orientation of the field gradient at the T-wave apex 4 minutes postexercise, compared to baseline, was greater in CAD patients (31 ± 43°) than in controls (9 ± 8° P < 0.05). This change was larger in the patient group with stenosis in the right than in the left coronary artery (P < 0.05). Conclusions: Transient acute myocardial ischemia causes well-recognizable changes in the magnetocardiogram at the ST segment and the T wave. The orientation of the maximum spatial gradient of the magnetic field can be used as a parameter to determine these changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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36. Nonflouroscopic Localization of an Amagnetic Stimulation Cathether by Multichannel Magnetocardiography.
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Fenici, Riccardo, Nenonen, Jukka, Pesola, Katja, Korhonen, Petri, Lötjönen, Jyrki, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Toivonen, Lauri, Poutanen, Veli-Pekka, Keto, Pekka, and Katila, Toivo
- Subjects
CATHETERS ,CARDIAC pacing ,FLUOROSCOPY ,CARDIOGRAPHY ,ELECTRONICS in cardiology ,PATIENTS - Abstract
This study was performed to: (1) evaluate the accuracy of noninvasive magneto-cardiographic (MCC) localization of an amagnetic stimulation catheter; (2) validate the feasibility of this multipurpose catheter; and (3) study the characteristics of cardiac evoked fields. A stimulation catheter specially designed to produce no magnetic disturbances was inserted into the heart of five patients after routine electrophysiological studies. The catheter position was documented on biplane cine x-ray images. MCG signals were then recorded in a magnetically shielded room during cardiac pacing. Noninvasive localization of the catheter's tip and stimulated depolarization was computed from measured MCG data using a moving equivalent current-dipole source in patient-specific boundary element torso models. In all five patients, the MCG localizations were anatomically in good agreement with the catheter positions defined from the x-ray images. The mean distance between the position of the tip of the catheter defined from x-ray fluoroscopy and the MCG localization was 11 ± 4 mm. The mean three-dimensional difference between the MCC localization at the peak stimulus and the MCC localization, during the ventricular evoked response about 3 ms later, was 4 ± 1 mm calculated from signal-averaged data. The 95% confidence interval of heat-to-beat localization of the tip of the stimulation catheter from ten consecutive beats in the patients was 4 ± 2 mm. The propagation velocity of the equivalent current dipole between 5 and 10 ms after the peak stimulus was 0.9 ± 0.2 m/s. The results show that the use of the amagnetic catheter is technically feasible and reliable in clinical studies. The accurate three-dimensional localization of this multi-purpose catheter by multichannel MCG suggests that the method could be developed toward a useful clinical tool during electrophysiological studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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37. Nonfluoroscopic Localization of an Amagnetic Catheter in a Realistic Torso Phantom by Magnetocardiographic and Body Surface Potential Mapping.
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Fenici, Riccardo, Pesolai, Katja, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Nenonen, Jukka, Teener, Uwe, Fenici, Peter, and Katila, Toivo
- Subjects
HEART disease diagnosis ,CATHETERS ,CARDIOGRAPHY ,X-rays ,PATIENTS ,MEDICAL sciences - Abstract
This study was performed to evaluate the accuracy of multichannel magnetocardiographic (MCG) and body surface potential mapping (BSPM) in localizing three-dimensionally the tip of an amagnetic catheter for electrophysiology without fluoroscopy. An amagnetic catheter (AC), specially designed to produce dipolar sources of different geometry without magnetic disturbances, was placed inside a physical thorax phantom at two different depths, 38 mm and 88 mm below the frontal surface of the phantom. Sixty-seven MCG and 123 BSPM signals generated by the 10 mA current stimuli fed into the catheter were then recorded in a magnetically shielded room. Non- invasive localization of the tip of the catheter was computed from measured MCG and BSPM data using an equivalent current dipole source in a phantom-specific boundary element torso model. The mean 3-dimensional error of the MCG localization at the closer level was 2 ± 1 mm. The corresponding error calculated from the BSPM measurements was 4 ± 1 mm. At the deeper level, the mean localization errors of MCG and BSPM were 7 ± 4 mm and 10 ± 2 mm, respectively. The results showed that MCG and BSPM localization of the tip of the AC is accurate and reproducible provided that the signal-to-noise ratio is sufficiently high. In our study, the MCG method was found to be more accurate than BSPM. This suggests that both methods could be developed towards a useful clinical tool for nonfluoroscopic 3-dimensional electroanatomical imaging during electrophysiological studies, thus minimizing radiation exposure to patients and operators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Localization of Myocardial Infarction Based on Learning Vector Quantization Networks Applied to ST Elevations of the 12-Lead ECG.
- Author
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Reinhardt, Lutz, Vesanto, Riikka, Montonen, Juha, Fetsch, Thomas, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Sierra, Gilberto, Katila, Toivo, and Breithardt, Günter
- Abstract
Background During recent years artificial neural networks have been proposed as a diagnostic tool in different fields of cardiology. Most of the studies have utilized the multilayer perceptron with backpropagation learning rule for the design of the network. As a new approach, Learning Vector Quantization (LVQ) which belongs to the class of competitive learning networks, was developed particularly for classification problems. So far there are no data available on the application of LVQ for classification tasks in cardiology. The present study aims at investigating the performance of LVQ for localization of myocardial infarction (Ml) based on ST elevations in the standard 12-lead ECG. Methods Altogether, 769 male patients (age 53 ± 7 years) with an acute Ml were included into the study. Three hundred fifty-three patients (46%) presented with anterior and 416 patients (54%) with inferior Ml based on typical changes in the standard 12-lead ECG. Standardized ST elevations in all 12 leads were used as input structure for the network. The performance of the network was studied using two different learning and test sets. The influence of the number of reference vectors and training steps on the classification accuracy for infarct location was investigated. Results The highest classification accuracy of 88.6% for infarct location was achieved using the learning set with 66% of all patients. This setup was based on five reference vectors and 200 training steps. The best accuracies for anterior Ml were higher as compared to inferior infarctions in both the test and training set. Using more than 50 reference vectors resulted in a decrease of classification accuracy due to overtraining of the network. Conclusion Appropriately initialized and trained artificial neural networks based on LVQ give a high accuracy for localization of Ml using only ST elevations of the standard 12-lead ECG. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Risk Stratification of Patients After Myocardial Infarction Based on Wavelet Decomposition of the Signal-Averaged Electrocardiogram.
- Author
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Sierra, Gilberto, Reinhardt, Lutz, Fetsch, Thomas, Martínez-Rubio, Antoni, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Yli-Mäyry, Sinikka, Montonen, Juha, Katila, Toivo, Borggrefe, Martin, and Breithardt, Günter
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the prognostic significance of the wavelet decomposition (WD), when applied to single leads of the signal-averaged ECG (SAECG) of postinfarction patients, as well as to compare it with conventional time-domain (TD) analysis in order to optimize the utility of high resolution ECG techniques in risk stratification. Comparisons with clinical variables were also performed. Methods: SAECGs of 769 patients were analyzed (mean age 53 ± 7 years). A total of 42 arrhythmic events occurred within 54 months. For numerical calculations of WD, relative energies of the QRS complex were obtained in seven frequency bands. Conventional parameters of late potential analysis in TD were calculated at 25 and 40 Hz high pass filter. Results: No significant correlation was found between parameters of both methods. Several parameters of the WD of single leads showed slightly higher sensitivity (e.g., 52% vs 36%) and positive predictive values (e.g., 13.3% vs 10.2%) compared with those obtained with the QRS duration of TD analysis. In multivariate analysis, combination of QRS duration with WD parameters (relative risk [rr] =4.55, P < 0.0001), followed by the WD of single leads (rr = 4.19, P < 0.0001), nonsustained ventricular tachycardia in the long-term ECG (rr = 3.72, P = 0.0005) and the history of previous infarction (rr = 2.72, P = 0.0035) were the most significant predictors in risk stratification. Conclusion: Time domain and wavelet transform of SAECG resulted in an improvement in postinfarction risk stratification compared with the clinical variables included in this study. Wavelet parameters may not be vastly superior to QRS duration, but they are a new index measuring intra-QRS phenomena. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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40. Reduced Beat-to-Beat Changes of Heart Rate: An Important Risk Factor after Acute Myocardial Infarction.
- Author
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Reinhardt, Lutz, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Fetsch, Thomas, Martinez-Rubio, Antoni, Böcker, Dirk, Block, Michael, Borggrefe, Martin, and Breithardt, Günter
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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41. Magnetocardiographic QT Interval Dispersion in Postmyocardial Infarction Patients with Sustained Ventricular Tachycardia: Validation of Automated QT Measurements.
- Author
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Oikarinen, Lasse, Paavola, Mika, Montonen, Juha, Viitasalo, Matti, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Toivonen, Lauri, and Katilat, Toivo
- Subjects
MYOCARDIAL infarction ,TACHYCARDIA ,VENTRICULAR tachycardia ,ARRHYTHMIA ,HEART diseases ,CORONARY disease ,CARDIOLOGY - Abstract
QT dispersion is a measure of heterogeneity in ventricular repolarization. Increased ECG QT dispersion is associated with life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias. We studied if magnetocardiographic (MCG) measures of QT dispersion can separate postmyocardial infarction patients with and without susceptibility to sustained VT. Manual dispersion measurements were compared to a newly adopted automatic QT interval analysis method. Ten patients with a history of sustained VT (VT group) and eight patients without ventricular arrhythmias (Controls) were studied after a remote myocardial infarction. Single-channel MCGs were recorded from 42 locations over the frontal chest area and the signals were averaged. QT dispersion was defined as maximum - minimum or standard deviation of measured QT intervals. VT group showed significantly more QT and JT dispersion than Controls. QT
apex dispersions were 127 ± 26 versus 83 ± 21 ms (P = 0.004) and QTend dispersions 130 ± 37 versus 82 ± 37 ms (P = 0.013), respectively. Automatic method gave comparable values. Their relative differences were 9% for QTapex and 27% for QTend dispersion on average. In conclusion, increased MCG QT interval dispersion seems to be associated with a susceptibility to VT in postmyocardial infarction patients. MCG mapping with automated QT interval analysis may provide a user independent method to detect nonhomogeneity in ventricular repolarization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Case of the month by the EHRA Education committee: exercise-related arrhythmias.
- Author
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Van Gelder, Isabelle C., Boriani, Giuseppe, Ernst, Sabine, Heidbuchel, Hein, Zaza, Antonio, Mäkijärvi, Markku, and Gorenek, Bulent
- Abstract
This case describes two nephews with exercise-related arrhythmias. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2008
43. Case of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia after stroke necessitating defibrillation.
- Author
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Van Gelder, Isabelle C., Boriani, Giuseppe, Ernst, Sabine, Heidbuchel, Hein, Zaza, Antonio, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Gorenek, Bulent, and Lundquist, Carina Blomström
- Abstract
This case describes the occurrence of a tachycardia occurring early after a subarachnoid haemorrhage. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2008
44. Case of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia after stroke necessitating defibrillation.
- Author
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Van Gelder, Isabelle C., Boriani, Giuseppe, Ernst, Sabine, Heidbuchel, Hein, Zaza, Antonio, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Gorenek, Bulent, and Lundquist, Carina Blomström
- Published
- 2008
45. Case of the month by the EHRA Education committee: exercise-related arrhythmias.
- Author
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Van Gelder, Isabelle C., Boriani, Giuseppe, Ernst, Sabine, Heidbuchel, Hein, Zaza, Antonio, Mäkijärvi, Markku, Gorenek, Bulent, and Lundquist, Carina Blomström
- Abstract
This case describes two nephews with exercise related arrhythmias. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2008
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