Researchers say ECG
standards should be revised for Elderly
Newswise — Researchers
at Mayo Clinic suggest that the established
“normal” ranges for evaluating
electrocardiograms for persons over 80 years
old should be “revisited.”
The
recommendation comes in a study published
today in the American Journal of Geriatric
Cardiology.
After analyzing
readings from more than 700 patients 80 or
older, the researchers discovered that the
average cutoffs (beginning and end points)
for measuring all three ECG intervals -- PR,
QRS and QT -- were greater than the current
established norms.
The findings also showed
that the intervals, while greater in
general, were significantly higher in men.
The intervals refer to the times between
recorded peaks of the specific motions in a
heartbeat as represented on an
electrocardiogram.
“What is normal for a
population of middle-aged individuals may
not be the same for the steadily increasing
elderly population in this country,” says
Latha Stead, M.D., lead author of the study
and chair of the Division of Emergency
Medicine Research at Mayo Clinic.
Significance of the
Findings
America’s “boomer”
generation is quickly aging into a geriatric
generation. In 1994 one person in eight was
elderly; by 2030, that figure will be one in
five.
As these individuals age, physicians
need to have appropriate standards to
evaluate their cardiac health, whether they
have a routine checkup or appear in an
emergency department.
Mayo is seeking the
best information about how to treat each
individual, no matter what the age.
Researchers studied ECG
results from 702 patients who came to Mayo
Clinic for routine annual examinations.
Forty-six percent, or 331, were men. Just
under 18 percent of all patients had a
history of cardiac disease.
Basing their
reference ranges on the healthy subgroup --
578 patients who either had no history of
heart disease or who were taking heart
medication -- the researchers established
averages for each of the three ECG prolonged
intervals, in men and women.
In all cases,
the average interval cutoffs for women were
higher than the standards set out in the
current medical literature.
For men, the
cutoffs were considerably higher -- in some
cases more than twice as high. Based on the
findings, the researchers suggest ECG
standards be re-examined for both age and
sex for the older population.
The research team also
included Lekshmi Vaidyanathan, M.B.B.S.;
Sandhya Behera, M.B.B.S.; Rachel Gilmore,
M.B.B.Ch., M.R.C.P.I.; Amy Weaver; Gerald
Gau, M.D.; and Wyatt Decker, M.D.; all from
Mayo Clinic; and Krishna Vedula, University
of Minnesota