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Featured researches published by O. Edhag.


American Heart Journal | 1991

Electrophysiologic effects and clinical hazards of carbamazepine treatment for neurologic disorders in patients with abnormalities of the cardiac conduction system

Göran Kennebäck; Lennart Bergfeldt; Hans Vallin; Torbjörn Tomson; O. Edhag

Carbamazepine, a first-line drug for the treatment of epilepsy and neuralgia, may exert hazardous effects on the cardiac conduction system. Standard ECG and long-term ECG monitoring and invasive electrophysiologic testing were carried out in 10 patients who required this drug for neurologic disorders, but in whom its safe use had been questioned because of symptoms of ECG abnormalities. We observed depression of sinus node function and an atrioventricular conduction delay with a significant prolongation of the PQ interval of 16 msec (9%; 95% confidence interval: 1.9% to 16.5%; p less than 0.05), of which the HV interval was significantly prolonged but not the PA and AH intervals. These effects are in accordance with previously shown class 1A properties. However, the lack of effects on QRS, JT, and QT intervals at normal heart rates is a class 1B characteristic. Thus carbamazepine seems to have composite electropharmacologic actions. A cause effect relationship between carbamazepine treatment and significant arrhythmias was established in five patients. Thus the negative chronotropic and dromotropic effects of carbamazepine may, at least in predisposed patients, induce symptoms confusingly similar to the epileptic seizures it is used to prevent.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1988

HLA-B27: An important genetic risk factor for lone aortic regurgitation and severe conduction system abnormalities

Lennart Bergfeldt; Per Insulander; Dan Lindblom; Erna Möller; O. Edhag

PURPOSE HLA-B27, an immunogenetic marker that is present in 8 percent of the white population around the world, has been found to be an important risk factor for the development of a group of rheumatic disorders, the seronegative spondyloarthropathies. Our objective was to assess the possible role of HLA-B27 and the associated inflammatory disease process in the development of lone aortic regurgitation. PATIENTS AND METHODS A group of 91 patients with lone aortic regurgitation were studied by HLA typing and clinical and roentgenologic examination. RESULTS The HLA-B27-associated inflammatory disease process was found to be the probable underlying cause in 15 to 20 percent of patients with lone aortic regurgitation of different degrees of severity. Furthermore, HLA-B27 was found in 88 percent of the male patients with the combination of aortic regurgitation and severe conduction system abnormalities. CONCLUSION We suggest that this cardiac syndrome should be regarded as an HLA-B27-associated syndrome, sometimes part of ankylosing spondylitis or Reiters disease, but just as often presenting without obvious rheumatic disease. The marker is thus an important and widely distributed risk factor not only for the development of rheumatic disease but also for acquired aortic regurgitation and sever conduction system abnormalities.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1982

Ankylosing spondylitis: An important cause of severe disturbances of the cardiac conduction system: Prevalence among 223 pacemaker-treated men☆

Lennart Bergfeldt; O. Edhag; L. Vedin; H. Vallin

The cause of severe disturbances of the cardiac conduction system is seldom possible to establish clinically at pacemaker implantation, apart from cases of acute myocardial infarction or digitalis intoxication and in relatively rare cases of inflammatory disorders such as sarcoidosis and systemic sclerosis. Since cardiac manifestations, mainly conduction disturbances, occur in patients with ankylosing spondylitis, the prevalence of this disease was determined using radiologic screening for sacroiliitis in a population of 223 men who had permanently implanted pacemakers. Sacroiliitis was found in 19 men (8.5 percent), 15 of whom fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for ankylosing spondylitis. In six patients, sacroiliitis was asymptomatic and two of the patients were completely free of symptoms other than those originating from their heart manifestations. In seven of the 15 patients with ankylosing spondylitis and in the four patients with sacroiliitis without clinical criteria of ankylosing spondylitis, the diagnosis was previously unknown. Uveitis and aortic regurgitation occurred in five patients each, while peripheral arthritis was twice as common. The prevalence of sacroiliitis and ankylosing spondylitis of 8.5 and 6.7 percent, respectively, differ significantly (p less than 0.01) from the frequencies found in general Caucasian populations of 1 to 2 and 0.1 to 0.5 percent, respectively. HLA B27 was present in more than 80 percent of the patients with sacroiliitis and/or ankylosing spondylitis, compared with 8 to 10 percent in the general population. This strong association is in accordance with previous studies of patients with symptomatic sacroiliitis and/or ankylosing spondylitis. Thus sacroiliitis, diagnosed by x-ray, can be considered a marker for this relatively common rheumatic cause of severe disturbances of the cardiac conduction system.


American Heart Journal | 1985

Clinical and electrophysiologic course of sinus node disease: Five-year follow-up study

Mȧrten Rosenqvist; Hans Vallin; O. Edhag

Thirty patients with symptomatic sinus node disease (SND) who 5 years previously had undergone a clinical investigation including intracardiac electrophysiologic studies with pharmacologic inhibition of autonomic tone were followed up with respect to development of arrhythmias and cardiac conduction abnormalities. In 17 of these patients a reinvestigation, including a second intracardiac study, was performed. Stable atrial fibrillation developed in five patients, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia occurred in one patient, and complete heart block appeared in another patient. Paroxysmal atrial arrhythmias and radiographic atrial enlargement were more common at the initial investigation in patients who during follow-up developed either stable atrial fibrillation or paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia. Development of complete heart block was associated with signs of severe conduction defects at the initial study. General progression of conduction dysfunction as evaluated by intracardiac techniques was not a finding in this study. Conduction abnormalities limited to the atrioventricular (AV) node did not in this context predict a clinically important progression. The results indicate that those patients with SND who are predisposed to develop high-grade AV block and atrial arrhythmias can be identified by Holter monitoring, chest x-ray examination, and an intracardiac electrophysiologic study. These possibilities improve the selection of patients suitable for pacing modes preserving atrial transport.


Clinical Endocrinology | 1992

Cardiac conduction in patients with hypercalcaemia due to primary hyperparathyroidism

Mårten Rosenqvist; Jörgen Nordenström; Mats Andersson; O. Edhag

OBJECTIVE To assess whether hypercalcaemia due to primary hyperparathyroidism is associated with significant cardiac arrhythmias.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1994

Atrioventricular block progression in patients with bifascicular block assessed by repeated electrocardiography and a bradycardia-detecting pacemaker.

Lennart Bergfeldt; Nils Edvardsson; Mårten Rosenqvist; Hans Vallin; O. Edhag

Syncope may be due to intermittent high-degree atrioventricular (AV) block, but a cause-relation is sometimes difficult to prove. Diagnostic methods with high predictive value proven by instruments for safe and sensitive follow-up are needed. A bradycardia-detecting pacemaker was used in patients with bifascicular block, who had been the subjects of pharmacologic stress testing of the His-Purkinje system. Thirty-seven patients were included, of whom 26 had experienced at least 1 syncopal episode of suspected bradycardia origin, and 11 had previously documented transient high-degree AV block. The electrophysiologic study included injection of disopyramide 2 mg/kg (up to 150 mg) over 5 minutes. A positive test result was defined as spontaneous or pacing-induced His-Purkinje high-degree AV block after drug or a drug-induced HV prolongation of > or = 50%. Patients were followed an average 63 months with repeated electrocardiography and a diagnostic pacemaker (n = 23). Altogether, 24 patients had a significant bradycardia diagnosed by either or both methods. The sensitivity and positive predictive values were: HV interval > or = 70 ms at baseline, 47% and 88%; a positive disopyramide test result, 75% and 80%; and HV interval > or = 70 ms or a positive disopyramide test result, 93% and 74%, respectively. Thus, the diagnostic pacemaker is a safe and sensitive tool for evaluating the information obtained at electrophysiologic study, and pharmacologic stress testing with disopyramide has an informative value in patients with bifascicular block and syncope when results at baseline are inconclusive.


Public Health | 1987

Trial of a method of reducing inappropriate demands on a hospital emergency department

Helen Hansagi; Barbro Carlsson; Mariann Olsson; O. Edhag

An attempt was made at Huddinge Hospital, Sweden to divert to more appropriate facilities patients presenting at the Emergency Department (ED) with non-urgent complaints. During the study period, more than a quarter (total 454) of all care-seekers during daytime at six specialities of the ED were classified as non-urgent by the reception staff. Of these, 347 (76%) were seen by an experienced nurse who gave medical advice and made appointments with alternative sources of health care providers. Fifty-five percent of those she saw were directed to alternative care while 45% were treated at the ED, mostly because of insufficient capacity of the neighbourhood health centres. Short-term follow-up showed no increase in revisits to the ED by patients successfully directed to other care compared with the control group which was cared for at the ED.


Epilepsy Research | 1992

Carbamazepine induced bradycardia - a problem in general or only in susceptible patients? A 24-h long-term electrocardiogram study

Göran Kennebäck; Lennart Bergfeldt; Torbjörn Tomson; E Spina; O. Edhag

Carbamazepine is a first line drug in the treatment of epilepsy and trigeminal neuralgia, but may exert negative chronotropic and dromotropic effects on the cardiac conduction system. Bradyarrhythmias of different types and severity have been described, especially in the elderly, but the prevalence of arrhythmias in a larger group of carbamazepine treated patients is unknown. Forty-eight patients, 40 years of older, on continuous carbamazepine treatment because of various neurologic disorders were investigated by interview, physical examination, 12-lead surface electrocardiogram, and 24-h long-term electrocardiogram recording. The prevalence of bradyarrhythmias was compared with that in an age-stratified reference group. There was no differences between the two groups, either in the number or the duration of pauses or in the type of pauses. In conclusion, carbamazepine does not increase the risk of bradyarrhythmias in the vast majority of patients.


Scandinavian journal of social medicine | 1989

Health care utilization after referral from a hospital emergency department.

Helen Hansagi; Peter Allebeck; O. Edhag

In a trial, patients who came to a hospital Emergency Department (ED) with non-urgent complaints were advised and referred to primary health care outside the hospital. The effect of this was assessed by measuring health care utilization one year before and one year after the referral, using the Stockholm County computerized medical information system and ED medical records. The proportion of the 189 referred patients who visited the ED decreased from 48% to 42%, whereas in a control group of 107 patients the proportion increased from 41% to 51%. A small proportion, 7%, of the referred patients with four or more ED visits accounted for 45% of the total number of ED visits the year before the trial. These frequent ED users did not reduce their ED utilization more than frequent ED users in the control group. The use of health care centres increased in the referred group and was practically unchanged in the control group. However, those referred patients who continued to use the ED still quite often did so for non-urgent complaints.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1984

HLA-B27-associated heart disease: Clinicopathologic study of three cases

Lennart Bergfeldt; O. Edhag; Jovan Rajs

The histologic features of the cardiac lesions in HLA-B27-associated heart disease were examined in three cases that illustrate different nuances of the clinical spectrum of this disorder. One of these cases constitutes an important link between the previously established concept of cardiac manifestations in ankylosing spondylitis and Reiters disease and the recently introduced, wider concept of HLA-B27-associated cardiac manifestations. A correlation between the invasive electrophysiologic results and the autopsy findings is demonstrated in another case.

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