INTRODUCTION
Palpitations are
a frequent symptom and the motive of many visits to emergency
services and cardiology clinics. On many occasions, palpitations
are produced by arrhythmias. It can be difficult to establish the
cause of palpitations, as much because of the medical history as
the scant percentage of diagnoses usually reached with conventional
studies1. Among patients who refer palpitations,
abundant information is available about patients with structural
heart disease, but not about patients with palpitations and a
healthy heart.
The aim of the
present study is to determine the performance of event recorders in
reaching a diagnosis of the cause of palpitations as a symptom in
patients without structural heart disease.
PATIENTS
AND METHOD
Patient
selection
This study
included all patients seen for palpitations in the emergency
services and outpatient clinics of the Servicio de
Cardiología of Hospital Virgen del Rocío, Sevilla, in
a period of 20 consecutive months, without detecting structural
heart disease.
Inclusion
and exclusion criteria
The patients
selected to form part of the study were seen because they had
suffered palpitations at least once in the previous 15 days, but
structural heart disease (including left ventricular hypertrophy)
had been excluded and no significant arrhythmias (symptomatic
supraventricular or ventricular extrasystoles, sustained or
unsustained symptomatic tachycardia) were detected in a 24-h
Holter. All patients with structural heart disease and pathological
ECG who duly underwent electrophysiological study (according to SEC
recommendations) of their arrhythmia, or had a documented history
of arrhythmia, were excluded. It was not the aim of this study to
analyze patients with structural heart disease, so their data were
not collected.
Standardized evaluation of all patients
Before providing
patients with transtelephonic electrocardiography equipment (TTE),
they underwent a standardized evaluation that included a complete
medical history, physical examination, 12-lead electrocardiogram,
Doppler-color echocardiogram, and a 24-h Holter recording. In no
patient did the Holter recording yield a diagnosis, so all patients
were provided with a TTE monitor (Cardiotest 4DM®,
Cardiplus Telemedicina S.L.) after the standardized
evaluation.
Transtelephonic electrocardiogram
The Cardiotest
4DM® monitor is a pocket monitor capable of
acquiring and recording the external signal of the heart rhythm
with an electrocardiographic lead connected to the monitor by 4
electrodes located on the back of the device. The electrode is
placed in contact with the skin at a site next to the sternum and
at the fourth rib (a site equivalent to lead V2). The monitor can
also receive a signal through a cable connected to 3 conventional
strip electrodes. The patients were instructed to use it when
palpitations appeared. To keep the patient trained and to correct
errors, they were instructed to tape and transmit
transtelephonically for a 2-min period every day. After training
each patient, they were provided a monitor for 15 days, a period
that was extended 15 days longer if the patient's palpitations did
not reappear. Once the patient had recorded the daily follow-up or
the events he or she suffered, they were transmitted telephonically
to the data-receiver center 24 hours a day.
Definitions
Palpitations
Symptom referred
by patients who describe a subjective sensation of a disturbance in
heart rhythm in the form of increased frequency, intensity, or a
change in rhythm.
Arrhythmias
Disturbances in
the ECG transmitted by patients that constitute known pathological
rhythms (frequently sinus tachycardia over 100 beats/min,
supraventricular paroxysmal tachycardia, nonsustained ventricular
tachycardia, sustained ventricular tachycardia, supraventricular
extrasystoles, and ventricular extrasystoles.
Palpitations without arrhythmia
Palpitations
during which the monitor recorded sinus rhythm; in these cases the
patient was asked to record another episode of
palpitations.
Objective
The aim of the
study was to record the cardiac rhythm while the patient was
experiencing symptoms in order to diagnose the arrhythmic or
non-arrhythmic cause of patient´s symptoms. The diagnosis was
considered correct when a complete 2-min recording was obtained
while the patient described his or her symptoms (changes in the
rhythm, intensity, or frequency of the heartbeat).
Statistical analysis
The qualitative
variables are expressed as percentages and the quantitative
variables as mean±SD. Diagnosed and undiagnosed patients
were compared using the X² test. The Student t test was used
to compare means. The SPSS V. 10.0. statistical package was
used.
RESULTS
From February
1998 to December 2000, we included 227 patients in the study,
including 167 women (74%). The mean age of patients was 45±3
years (range, 12-85 years). Ten patients were less than 20 years
old, 103 were 21 to 45 years old, 94 patients were 46 to 70 years
old, and 20 were over 71 years old. Two (0.6%) patients had a
history of arterial hypertension and were under treatment with
ramipril and quinapril. No patient was receiving antiarrhythmic
treatment. Only 12% of patients referred dyspnea in addition to
palpitations. The time since onset of the palpitations was
7±5 months (range, 1-36 months). Their duration was not
quantified.
The mean number
of days that the patients kept the monitor was 15±3 days. A
total of 212 of the 227 patients included (93.3%) had palpitations
in the 15 days that they had the monitor, and 210 (92.5%) used the
monitor correctly to record the cardiac rhythm that coincided with
these palpitations (Figure 1). In all the cases the patients
reported self-limited palpitations. Fifteen patients (6.6%), 11 of
them women, did not have palpitations on the study days. In 125
(55%), the Cardiotest 4DM® correctly recorded and
transmitted by telephone the arrhythmias responsible for the
palpitations described by the patients. In 85 patients (37%), no
arrhythmia was detected during palpitations that could have
explained them, thus excluding arrhythmia as the cause of
palpitations and establishing the diagnosis of palpitations without
arrhythmia. Two patients (0.8%) did not know to use the monitor, a
63 year-old patient and an 81 year-old patient with
Parkinson´s disease. The electrocardiographic findings
obtained in symptomatic patients are presented in Table 1. No
statistically significant differences were observed by sex
(?
2
=3.5; P = .17).
There was no relation between time since onset of symptoms and the
presence of arterial hypertension (P=NS), arrhythmias
(P=NS), or the type of arrhythmia found (P=NS). The
same percentage of diagnoses was reached in patients with dyspnea
as in those without dyspnea (56% versus 55%;
P=NS).

Fig.
1. Flow chart of the patients included in the study of
palpitations with Cardiotest 4DM®.

In 35 of the 227
patients (15.4%), significant self-limited arrhythmias were
detected: 21 paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (Figure 2), 9
atrial fibrillation, 5 atrial flutter, 4 triplets of ventricular
extrasystoles, and 1 ventricular tachycardia of the right
ventricular outflow tract. Pharmacological or electrophysiological
treatment was correctly established for the arrhythmias in all
patients.

Fig.
2. Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia at 190 beats/min
recorded in a 37 year-old patient with palpitations.
DISCUSSION
Referring to a
subjective symptom as «palpitations» does not establish
a firm relation with the presence of demonstrable changes in
cardiac rhythm or frequency2. Ambulatory 24-h Holter
recordings in patients with heart disease and healthy volunteers
has demonstrated that the relation between palpitations and cardiac
irregularities is weak, many patients with palpitations do not have
arrhythmias, and many patients with arrhythmias do not report
symptoms. In addition, it has been established that the experience
of the physician influences his or her understanding of what each
patient described as palpitations (OR=1.8 [1.03-3.2]; 95% CI), even
after adjusting for the clinical and demographic characteristics of
patients3. This aspect, together with the association
between the presence of structural heart disease and arrhythmias,
and, finally, the limited health care resources available in the
Spanish national health care system are the three main
conditionants of the diagnostic approach to patients seen for
palpitations in which structural heart disease is excluded. Our
study did not attempt to compare the value of the medical history
for predicting the type of arrhythmia that the patient has based on
monitor findings, so this point is not contemplated and must be
examined in future studies.
Frequently, the
diagnostic study of patients with palpitations concludes when a
24-h Holter recording has been made (which is usually normal),
which is why its capacity for diagnosing transitory and infrequent
events has been questioned4,5. Many attempts have been
made to extend its range beyond 24 h, generally by using event
recorders, which often are equipped for transtelephonic
transmission. These recorders are activated by the patients and
increase the number of diagnoses reached in patients who have
palpitations5,7-9. Since Furman et al. reported the use
of transtelephonic electrocardiography for the at-home follow-up of
patients with permanent pacemakers,10 other authors have
reported their experience with the use of event recorders in
diagnosis, the assessment of the effectiveness of antiarrhythmic
drugs, and even routine ECG11-16.
Two previous
studies that used event recorders to study palpitations have found
pathological rhythms and sinus rhythm in 67%-35% and 46%-20% of
patients, including patients with and without structural heart
disease. In pediatric patients with palpitations, the use of event
recorders has achieved a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of
62% in relating symptoms with arrhythmias17. In
pediatric patients with healthy hearts and normal findings with
conventional Holter, arrhythmias have been diagnosed in 27% of
cases18. Our study is the first to analyze prospectively
the usefulness of this device in the diagnosis of patients without
structural heart disease who report palpitations but are not
diagnosed by routine methods (all patients had an ECG, chest
radiograph, laboratory tests, echocardiography, and Holter). In our
series, although all the patients had a normal Holter recording,
Cardiotest 4DM® diagnosed an arrhythmia in 55% of
them that
was responsible
for their palpitations.
Using a
commercially available external device for 15±3 days, we
were able to diagnose arrhythmias that caused palpitations in 55%
of the patients, and to exclude arrhythmias as a cause of
palpitations in 37%. In a brief period of time, this monitor
provided valuable information for 92% of our patients without
structural heart disease who experienced palpitations. The
diagnoses reached in 30 patients with significant supraventricular
arrhythmia (21 paroxysmal tachycardia, 9 atrial fibrillation, and 5
atrial flutter) and in 5 patients with ventricular arrhythmia
should be emphasized. With conventional methods, these 35 patients
with «complex» arrhythmias had not been diagnosed. The
fact that these patients did not have structural heart disease may
suggest that in many cases there are no arrhythmias underlying the
palpitations described. However, but a prompt and accurate
diagnosis can change the natural history of arrhythmias like atrial
fibrillation, thus avoiding possible emboligenic complications or
syncope and their dramatic consequences in patients without heart
disease19-21. In patients with syncope, whether or not
structural heart disease exists, a new device known as the
implantable Holter has demonstrated its diagnostic
utility22-24. Future studies with this device should
increase our understanding of palpitations in patients without
structural heart disease.
Limitations
Only patients
with palpitations and no other symptoms were included, and the
profile of the risk of ischemic heart disease was not considered in
these patients since was not the object of the study. However, its
possible presence, particularly in older patients, cannot be
overlooked.
CONCLUSIONS
Cardiotest
4DM® allows the identification of arrhythmias in a
very high proportion of patients with palpitations and no known
structural heart disease.
ACKNOWLEDEMENTS
We thank Dr.
Luis Tercedor Sánchez for his critical review of the
manuscript.
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