The Problem of Adjusting the Wilson Central Terminal to a Zero of Potential in the Living Human Subject
- 1 January 1955
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 3 (1) , 94-102
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.3.1.94
Abstract
Evaluation of the potential of the Wilson terminal in 33 normal young adults indicates that its potential is zero about once in every twelve. Weighting of the terminal brought its potential to zero in ⅔ of the subjects and left a very small residual (technical) error in the remainder. The vertical component of the cardiac vector is primarily responsible for the error on the Wilson terminal. A weighted terminal in which the arm resistances are 2.6 times the left leg resistance has a zero potential in 50 percent of a small group of subjects. The residual error on the weighted terminal is at most one-half of that on the Wilson terminal. The eccentric origin of the cardiac vector varies only with respiration. Ordinarily, the zero-potential plane of the antero-posterior component of the cardiac vector passes simultaneously through or just dorsal to the limb electrodes and contributes little to the negative error on the Wilson terminal.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Theoretic Analysis of the Influence of Heart-Dipole Eccentricity on Limb Leads, Wilson Central-Terminal Voltage and the Frontal-Plane VectorcardiogramCirculation Research, 1953
- The Electric Field of an Eccentric Dipole in a Homogeneous Spherical Conducting MediumCirculation, 1950
- Experimental studies on the validity of the central terminal of Wilson as an indifferent reference pointAmerican Heart Journal, 1949
- On the possibility of constructing an Einthoven triangle for a given subjectAmerican Heart Journal, 1949
- On Einthoven's triangle, the theory of unipolar electrocardiographic leads, and the interpretation of the precordial electrocardiogramAmerican Heart Journal, 1946
- The electrical conductivity of the tissues near the heart and its bearing on the distribution of the cardiac action currentsAmerican Heart Journal, 1943
- Ueber das elektrische Feld des HerzensCardiology, 1939
- Electrocardiograms that represent the potential variations of a single electrodeAmerican Heart Journal, 1934
- The distribution of the potential differences produced by the heart beat within the body and at its surfaceAmerican Heart Journal, 1930
- THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF THE HUMAN ELECTROCARDIOGRAM AND THEIR SIGNIFICATION.The Lancet, 1912