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HOLTER MONITORING (EVENT RECORDER)
How is ambulatory monitoring performed? With the Holter monitor, electrode leads are applied to the skin (similar to the leads used in recording a standard ECG), and attached to a tape recorder. The patient is sent home and resumes normal activities while the tape recorder records a continuous ECG tracing for 24 or 48 hours. The Holter equipment is then removed, and the tape is analyzed. In contrast, event recorders do not record every heart beat on a tape. Instead, event recorders use a circular tape that stores only approximately 30 seconds of a patient's heart rhythm. That is, at any given time while a patient is wearing them, event recorders will have the most recent 30 seconds of the patient's ECG. When the patient experiences the symptom of interest, he/she presses a button that freezes the recording, which is then transmitted by telephone to an interpreting center. A major advantage of event recorders is that they can be used for up to 30 - 60 days, until the transient symptom being looked for occurs. Another advantage is that, as long as the symptom of interest typically lasts for more than a minute or two, the ECG electrodes do not actually need to be attached all the time. Since attaching the electrodes takes less than a minute, they can simply be attached as needed.
What information can be gained from ambulatory monitors? Event monitors are excellent at correlating a patients heart rhythm with a patient's symptoms. If a patient's symptoms are caused by a transient cardiac arrhythmia, event monitors are often the best way to make the diagnosis.
When should ambulatory monitoring be done? |