Results 161 to 170 of about 17,338 (212)
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Ambulatory Holter Electrocardiography

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1985
Excerpt To the editor: The recent article by Morganroth (1) succeeds well in presenting a balanced view of both the medical and technological aspects of Holter monitoring.
CHARLES L. FELDMAN, MARK HUBELBANK
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Ambulatory Electrocardiography

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1977
Advances in modern technology have made it possible to record and analyze the electrocardiographic data of ambulatory persons for as many as 24 h or more. This capability and an increasing awareness of cardiac dysrhythmias and myocardial ischemia as a cause of morbidity and mortality have led to the more widespread use of ambulatory electrocardiography
H L, Kennedy, D G, Caralis
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SUDDEN DEATH DURING AMBULATORY ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY

The Lancet, 1981
M. Møller, J.Straede Nielsen, H. Oxhøj
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Developments in Ambulatory Electrocardiography

Biomedical Instrumentation & Technology, 2006
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in many developed countries. There is a need for cardiovascular monitoring devices that can supplement traditional medical and clinical care by enabling the diagnosis of conditions with infrequent symptoms, the timely detection of critical signs that are precursors to sudden cardiac death, and ...
Valérie, Eveloy   +2 more
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Ambulatory electrocardiography in dogs

Veterinary Record, 1991
Twenty-four hour ambulatory electrocardiographic recording using a Medilog tape recorder was attempted in 16 healthy pet dogs weighing between 18.4 and 34 kg, while they were living in familiar surroundings. Full 24-hour records were obtained from 10 of them and recordings of more than 10 hours duration from two others; and the findings in these ...
L W, Hall   +3 more
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Ambulatory Electrocardiography

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1995
Background: This study evaluated the current clinical use and costs of ambulatory electrocardiographic (AECG) monitoring for arrhythmia detection based on a cost per management decision analysis. Methods: Consecutive inpatient and outpatient 24-hour AECGs (n=650) performed during the calendar year 1991 were retrospectively reviewed for clinical ...
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Ambulatory (Holter) electrocardiography and myocardial ischemia

American Heart Journal, 1989
Ambulatory (Holter) electrocardiography has evolved over the past two decades to allow accurate assessment of the cardiac rhythm, and more recently, accurate detection and measurement of ST segment changes. These ambulatory ECG ST segment changes that occur with and without symptoms, although thought to be of questionable clinical value for many years,
H L, Kennedy, R D, Wiens
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Ambulatory (Holter) Electrocardiography Technology

Cardiology Clinics, 1992
Ambulatory ECG is an evolutionary cardiovascular discipline with regard to both its clinical applications and technology. With the technologic advances of the past decade, powerful personal computers have expanded the traditional clinical role of ambulatory ECG examination for cardiac arrhythmias to detection of ST-segment changes, heart-rate ...
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