Cinical Electrocardiography—Its Present Position and Possible Potentialities
Open Access
- 1 July 1950
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 2 (1) , 94-110
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.2.1.94
Abstract
The present role of the electrocardiogram in clinical medicine is discussed and its limitations as a diagnostic tool are pointed out. Its particular usefulness in the analysis of arrhythmias and the value of certain specific empirically derived patterns are discussed. The misuse of the term "unipolar" is explained, the actual conditions present being only crude approximations of the assumptions upon which the equilateral triangle theory rests. The role of multiple V chest leads and the aV limb leads in clinical electrocardiography is outlined. A brief explanation of stereovectorcardiography and the great promise it holds for the future is presented.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- The ventricular gradient in doubtful electrocardiogramsAmerican Heart Journal, 1949
- Concealed A-V conduction: The effect of blocked impulses on the formation and conduction of subsequent impulsesAmerican Heart Journal, 1948
- Different mechanisms of fusion beatsAmerican Heart Journal, 1948
- The distribution of surface potential on the chest in intraventricular blockAmerican Heart Journal, 1941
- The effect of diffuse pericarditis on the electrocardiographic pattern of recent myocardial infarctionAmerican Heart Journal, 1941
- A common electrocardiographic variant following acute myocardial infarction—The Tn typeAmerican Heart Journal, 1941
- The electrocardiogram in pulmonary embolismAmerican Heart Journal, 1940
- Concerning a new concept of the genesis of the electrocardiogramAmerican Heart Journal, 1937
- The appearance of the T-wave in Lead IV in normal children and in children with rheumatic heart disease: With some observations concerning the cause of the T-waves obtainedAmerican Heart Journal, 1936
- The nature of experimental flutter and fibrillation of the heartAmerican Heart Journal, 1931