Electrical and mechanical alternation in pericardial effusion.
暂无分享,去创建一个
In a case of traumatic pericardial effusion with electrical and mechanical alternation, ultrasonic cardiography demonstrated excessive oscillatory motion of the heart. This motion occurred in both anteroposterior and left-to-right directions. The frequency of the motion was half the pulse rate and thus readily explains the electrical alternation. Pericardiocentesis abolished both of these phenomena.
[1] E. Rapaport,et al. Critical Assessment of Use of Central Venous Oxygen Saturation as a Mirror of Mixed Venous Oxygen in Severely Ill Cardiac Patients , 1969, Circulation.
[2] H. Feigenbaum,et al. Cardiac Motion in Patients with Pericardial Effusion: A Study Using Reflected Ultrasound , 1966, Circulation.
[3] D. Littmann,et al. Total Electrical Alternation in Pericardial Disease , 1958, Circulation.
[4] E. Baskind,et al. Electric Alternans in Pericardial Effusion , 1955, Circulation.