Circulation
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Randomized study of implantable defibrillator as first-choice therapy versus conventional strategy in postinfarct sudden death survivors.
In retrospective studies of sudden cardiac death survivors, the implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) compares favorably with medical and surgical therapy. Thus, use of the conventional strategy of starting treatment with antiarrhythmic drugs (AD), at least in certain patient categories, may be questionable. The goal of this study was to analyze the effectiveness of ICD implantation as first-choice therapy versus the conventional therapeutic strategy of starting with AD. ⋯ These data suggest that ICD implantation as first choice is preferable to the conventional approach in survivors of cardiac arrest caused by old myocardial infarction. Conventionally treated patients are likely to end up with an ICD, and those who remain on AD as sole therapy have a high risk of death regardless of efficacy assessment, including PES.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
RR variability in healthy, middle-aged persons compared with patients with chronic coronary heart disease or recent acute myocardial infarction.
The purpose of this investigation was to establish normal values of RR variability for middle-aged persons and compare them with values found in patients early and late after myocardial infarction. We hypothesized that presence or absence of coronary heart disease, age, and sex (in this order of importance) are all correlated with RR variability. ⋯ All measures of RR variability were significantly and substantially higher in healthy subjects than in patients with chronic or subacute coronary heart disease. The difference between healthy middle-aged persons and those with coronary heart disease was much greater 2 weeks after myocardial infarction than 1 year after infarction, but the fractional distribution of total power into its four component bands was similar for the healthy group and the two coronary heart disease groups. Values of RR variability previously reported to predict death in patients with known chronic coronary heart disease are rarely (approximately 1%) found in healthy middle-aged individuals. Thus, when measures of RR variability are used to screen groups of middle-aged persons to identify individuals who have substantial risk of coronary deaths or arrhythmic events, misclassification of healthy middle-aged persons should be rare.