ECG$23708$ - significado y definición. Qué es ECG$23708$
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Qué (quién) es ECG$23708$ - definición

PORTABLE DEVICE FOR CONTINUOUSLY MONITORING VARIOUS ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY OF THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM FOR AT LEAST 24 HOURS (OFTEN FOR TWO WEEKS AT A TIME)
Halter monitor; Holter Monitor; Holter monitors; Portable ECG device; Portable ECG devices; Holter recorder; Ambulatory electrocardiography monitor; Ambulatory ecg monitor
  • Screenshot of Holter ECG software
  • [[Atrial fibrillation]] recorded by a Holter monitor

Holter monitor         
In medicine, a Holter monitor (often simply Holter) is a type of ambulatory electrocardiography device, a portable device for cardiac monitoring (the monitoring of the electrical activity of the cardiovascular system) for at least 24 hours.
Wireless ambulatory ECG         
TYPE OF ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY
Wireless ambulatory ecg
Wireless ambulatory electrocardiography (ECG) is a type of ambulatory electrocardiography with recording devices that use wireless technology, such as Bluetooth and smartphones, for at-home cardiac monitoring (monitoring of heart rhythms). These devices are generally recommended to people who have been previously diagnosed with arrhythmias and want to have them monitored, or for those who have suspected arrhythmias and need to be monitored over an extended period of time in order to be diagnosed.
electrocardiography         
  • A 12-lead ECG of a 26-year-old male with an incomplete [[right bundle branch block]] (RBBB)
  • Formation of limb waveforms during a pulse
  • ECG from 1957
  • Diagram showing the contiguous leads in the same color in the standard 12-lead layout
  • Measuring time and voltage with ECG graph paper
  • vector]]
  • Animation of a normal ECG wave
  • A patient undergoing an ECG
  • Schematic representation of a normal ECG
  • thumb
  • An EKG electrode
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  • The limb leads and augmented limb leads (Wilson's central terminal is used as the negative pole for the latter in this representation)
  • Normal 12-lead ECG
  • real time monitoring]] of the heart in an [[intensive care unit]] in a German hospital (2015), the monitoring screen above the patient displaying an electrocardiogram and various values of parameters of the heart like heart rate and blood pressure
  • Placement of the precordial electrodes
  • Diagram showing how the polarity of the QRS complex in leads I, II, and III can be used to estimate the heart's electrical axis in the frontal plane.
  • An early commercial ECG device (1911)
METHOD TO RECORD THE ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY OF THE HEART THROUGH PASSIVE ELECTRODES PLACED OVER THE SKIN.
EKG; Electrocardiograph; Isoelectric line; Electrokardiogram; Elektrokardiogramm; Electrocardiography, ambulatory; Electrocardiograms; Electrocardiographic; Ecg; Electro-Cardio Gram; 12 lead; ECG interpretation tips; Electrocardiogram; ECG; P-R interval; 12-lead ECG; 12 lead ECG; Lead aVF; Lead aVR; Lead aVL; Precordial lead; Cardiac axis; Heart axis; HV interval; H deflection; H-V interval; Precordial leads; Fetal electrocardiography; Foetal scalp electrode; Fetal scalp electrode; Fetal ECG; Fetal electrocardiogram; Ekg; Contiguous lead; Contiguous leads; Electrocardiogram track; Atrial depolarization; Normal ECG; Intracardiac electrogram; Wilson's central terminal; Wilson central terminal; Ventricular depolarization; Ventricular repolarization
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¦ noun the measurement and recording of electrical activity in the heart using electrodes placed on the skin.
Derivatives
electrocardiogram noun
electrocardiograph noun
electrocardiographic adjective

Wikipedia

Holter monitor

In medicine, a Holter monitor (often simply Holter) is a type of ambulatory electrocardiography device, a portable device for cardiac monitoring (the monitoring of the electrical activity of the cardiovascular system) for at least 24 hours.

The Holter's most common use is for monitoring ECG heart activity (electrocardiography or ECG). Its extended recording period is sometimes useful for observing occasional cardiac arrhythmias which would be difficult to identify in a shorter period. For patients having more transient symptoms, a cardiac event monitor which can be worn for a month or more can be used.

The Holter monitor was developed at the Holter Research Laboratory in Helena, Montana, US by experimental physicists Norman J. Holter and Bill Glasscock, who started work on radio telemetry in 1949. Inspired by a suggestion from cardiologist Paul Dudley White in the early 1950s, they redirected their efforts toward development of a wearable cardiac monitoring device. The Holter monitor was released for commercial production in 1962.

When used to study the heart, much like standard electrocardiography, the Holter monitor records electrical signals from the heart via a series of electrodes attached to the chest. Electrodes are placed over bones to minimize artifacts from muscular activity. The number and position of electrodes varies by model, but most Holter monitors employ between three and eight. These electrodes are connected to a small piece of equipment that is attached to the patient's belt or hung around the neck, keeping a log of the heart's electrical activity throughout the recording period. A 12-lead Holter system is used when precise ECG information is required to analyse the exact origin of the abnormal signals.