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Dive into the research topics where Pablo Denes is active.

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Featured researches published by Pablo Denes.


Circulation | 1973

Demonstration of Dual A-V Nodal Pathways in Patients with Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia

Pablo Denes; Delon Wu; Ramesh C. Dhingra; Ruben Chuquimia; Kenneth M. Rosen

Electrophysiological evidence suggestive of dual atrioventricular (A-V) nodal pathways is presented in two patients with normal P-R interval and reentrant paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT). His bundle recordings and atrial stimulation were used to obtain this electrophysiological evidence.Refractory periods were measured with the atrial extra-stimulus technique. Plotting of H1-H2 responses against A1-A2 coupling intervals revealed that as A1-A2 decreased, H1-H2 decreased appropriately. At a critical A1-A2, a sudden marked increase in H1-H2 occurred, suggesting failure of fast pathway, (defining the fast pathway effective refractory period ERP). Further shortening of A1-A2 defined a second H1-H2 curve. The longest A1-A2 with no H2 response was defined as the slow pathway ERP. Echo zones coincided with A1-A2 intervals equal to or less than the fast pathway ERP.These results provide the first electrophysiological demonstration of dual A-V nodal pathways in patients with normal P-R interval and PSVT, as manifest by dual A-V nodal conduction times and refractory periods. Antegrade failure of the fast pathway with subsequent availability for retrograde conduction could allow A-V nodal reentry. These findings provide a basis for reentrance in some patients with reentrant PSVT.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1978

Clinical, electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic observations in patients with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia

Delon Wu; Pablo Denes; F Amat-y-Leon; Ramesh C. Dhingra; Christopher Wyndham; Robert A. Bauernfeind; Pervaize Latif; Kenneth M. Rosen

Seventy-nine patients without ventricular preexcitation but with documented paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia were analyzed. Electrophysiologic studies suggested atrioventricular (A-V) nodal reentrance in 50 patients, reentrance utilizing a concealed extranodal pathway in 9, sinus or atrial reentrance in 7 and ectopic automatic tachycardia in 3. A definite mechanism of tachycardia could not be defined in 10 patients (including 7 whose tachycardia was not inducible). The three largest groups with inducible tachycardias were compared in regard to age, presence of organic heart disease, rate of tachycardia, functional bundle branch block during tachycardia and relation of the P wave and QRS complex during tachycardia. A-V nodal reentrance was characterized by a narrow QRS complex and a P wave occurring simultaneously with the QRS complex during tachycardia. Reentrance utilizing a concealed extranodal pathway was characterized by young age, absence of organic heart disease, fast heart rate, presence of bundle branch block during tachycardia and a P wave following the QRS complex during tachycardia. Sinoatrial reentrance was characterized by frequent organic heart disease, a narrow QRS complex and a P wave in front of the QRS complex during tachycardia. In conclusion, a mechanism of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia could be defined in most patients. Observations of clinical and electrocardiographic features in these patients should allow prediction of the mechanism of the tachycardia.


Circulation | 1974

The Effects of Cycle Length on Cardiac Refractory Periods in Man

Pablo Denes; Delon Wu; Ramesh C. Dhingra; Raymond J. Pietras; Kenneth M. Rosen

The effects of pacing-induced changes in cycle length on the refractory periods of the atrium, A-V node and His-Purkinje system were studied in 24 patients using the extra stimulus technique. Refractory period determinations were made at two or more cycle lengths in all patients. Slopes relating cycle length and refractory periods were calculated using the least squares method.Both the effective and functional refractory periods (ERP and FRP) of the atrium shortened with decreasing cycle lengths, with a mean slope of +0.155 and +0.129 respectively. A-V nodal ERP lengthened (mean slope, −0.177) while A-V nodal FRP shortened slightly (mean slope, +0.126). Bundle branch refractory periods as well as relative refractory periods of the His-Purkinje system also decreased, with mean slopes of +0.270 and +0.360, respectively. The ERP of the A-V node at any cycle length was related to the A-H at that cycle length (r = +0.646, P < 0.001).The responses of the human heart to changes in cycle length are generally similar to those previously described in the animal laboratory. Such information contributes to our understanding of electrocardiographic phenomena such as aberrant conduction.


Circulation | 1983

Quantitative analysis of the high-frequency components of the terminal portion of the body surface QRS in normal subjects and in patients with ventricular tachycardia.

Pablo Denes; Pietro Santarelli; Robert G. Hauser; Eugene Uretz

Quantitative analysis of the high-frequency components of the terminal portion of the surface QRS was performed in 42 normal subjects (group 1, ages 18–67 years, mean + SEM 34.7 + 2.2 years) and in 12 patients with symptomatic, sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) (group 2, ages 48–76 years, mean 59 + 2.3 years). Signal averaging and high-pass, bidirectional digital filtering were used for analysis. The total duration of the QRS, the duration of the low-amplitude signals (< 40 1xV) in the terminal portion of the QRS and the amplitude of the signals in the last 40 and 50 msec of the QRS were measured at filter settings of 25 and 40 Hz. Reproducibility of the measurements was tested in 15 normal subjects by comparing results obtained from two consecutive recordings. Significant differences were found between normal subjects and VT patients for all four indexes at both 25- and 40-Hz filters. Specific values for each of the indexes were identified at the 40-Hz filtering, which could separate normal subjects from VT patients (20,uV for the amplitude of last 40 msec; 30;xV for the amplitude of last 50 msec; 120 msec for the total duration; and 39 msec for the low-amplitude signal of the filtered QRS). Using these values for the four indexes, respectively, 90%, 98%, 100% and 90% of the normal subjects and 83%, 83%, 58% and 83% for the VT group were correctly classified. The results show that the high-frequency analysis of the signalaveraged body surface QRS is a reliable, reproducible, noninvasive method for distinguishing patients with VT from normal subjects.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1983

Significance of ventricular tachycardia in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy: Observations in 35 patients

Shoei K. Huang; Joseph V. Messer; Pablo Denes

To evaluate the significance of ventricular tachycardia (VT) in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC), 35 consecutive patients seen between 1976 and 1980 were studied. The criteria for diagnosis of IDC were based on clinical, laboratory, and cardiac catheterization findings. All patients had right and left heart catheterization, left ventriculography, and coronary cineangiography. Long-term ambulatory electrocardiograms (Holter) were obtained in all patients at the time of diagnosis. There were 24 male and 11 female patients aged 22 to 72 years (mean +/- standard deviation [SD]51 +/- 12). Frequent ventricular premature beats (VPB) (30/h) were observed in 29 patients (83%): complex VPB (Lown grades 3, 4, and 5) in 93% and simple VPB in 7%. Twenty-one patients (60%) had nonsustained VT consisting of 3 to 46 beats (8 +/- 5) with rates from 75 to 210/min. No difference between patients with and those without VT was observed in regard to the presenting symptoms, functional classification, electrocardiographic findings, heart size on chest X-ray, and the hemodynamic measurements including cardiac index, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, and ejection fraction. Patients with VT were older (p less than 0.05). Follow-up observation from 4 to 74 months (34 +/- 17) showed that 2 patients died suddenly (1 with and 1 without previous VT), a third patient died from intractable congestive heart failure, and the fourth from sepsis. It is concluded that (1) the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias in IDC is high, (2) VT is frequent and tends to occur in the nonsustained form, and (3) there is no correlation between VT and the clinical and hemodynamic findings. VT does not appear to predict prognosis during a relatively short follow-up period in patients with IDC.


Heart | 1975

Dual atrioventricular nodal pathways. A common electrophysiological response.

Pablo Denes; Delon Wu; Ramesh C. Dhingra; F Amat-y-Leon; Christopher Wyndham; Kenneth M. Rosen

Evidence of dual atrioventricular nodal pathwats (a sudden jump in H1-H2 at critical A1-A2 coupling intervals) was shown in 41 out of 397 patients studied with atrial extrastimulus techniques. In 27 of these 41, dual pathways were demonstrable during sinus rhythm, or at a cycle length close to sinus rhythm (CL1). In the remaining 14, dual pathways were only demonstrated at a shorter cycle length (CL2). All patients with dual pathways at cycle length who were also tested at cycle length (11 patients) had dual pathways demonstrable at both cycle lengths. In these 11 patients both fast and slow pathway effective refractory periods increased with decrease in cycle length. Twenth-two of the patients (54%) had either an aetiological factor strongly associated with atrioventricular nodal dysfunction or one or more abnormalities suggesting depressed atrioventricular nodal function. Dvaluation of fast pathway properties suggested that this pathway was intranodal. Seventeen of the patients had previously documented paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (group 1). Eight patients had recurrent palpitation without documented paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (group 2), and 16 patients had neither palpitation nor paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (group 3). Echo zones were demonstrated in 15 patients (88%) in group 1, no patients in group 2, and 2 patients (13%) in group 3.


Circulation | 1976

Electrophysiological studies in patients with chronic recurrent ventricular tachycardia.

Pablo Denes; D Wu; Ramesh C. Dhingra; R Amat-y-Leon; C Wyndham; R K Mautner; K M Rosen

SUMMARY Seventeen consecutive patients with chronic recurrent ventricular tachycardia (VT) were studied in an attempt to delineate the reproducibility and mechanism of this arrhythmia. Six patients had nonsustained and 11 had sustained VT. The following electrophysiological techniques were utilized in an attempt to reproduce VT: 1) rapid atrial and ventricular pacing (17 pts); 2) atrial extrastimulus technique (17 pts); 3) ventricular extrastimulus technique (17 pts); 4) V1V2V3 stimulation technique (5 pts); 5) ventricular pacing from two or more sites (5 pts). Ventricular tachycardia was induced in six of 11 (54%) patients with sustained VT. However, in four there was only a single induction and only in the remaining two patients could VT be repetitively induced. In the latter two patients ventricular tachycardia was induced with both atrial and ventricular stimulation. Ventricular tachycardia could not be induced in any patient with nonsustained VT, although three had spontaneous episodes of ventricular tachycardia during study. In conclusion, in the present series of patients with chronic recurrent VT, this rhythm could not be reproducibly induced in the majority of patients in the cardiac catheterization laboratory utilizing catheter stimulation techniques.


Circulation | 1977

Effects of cycle length on atrial vulnerability.

Christopher Wyndham; F Amat-y-Leon; D Wu; Pablo Denes; Ramesh C. Dhingra; R. J. Simpson; K M Rosen

The effect of cycle length on atrial vulnerability was studied in 14 patients manifesting reproducible repetitive atrial firing during atrial extra-stimulus (A2) testing. Repetitive atrial firing was defined as the occurrence of two or more premature atrial responses with return cycle (A2-A2) of 250 msec or less and subsequent mean cycle length of 300 msec or less, following A2. The zone of repetitive atrial firing could be defined in terms of its longest and shortest A,-A2 coupling intervals. Each patient was tested at a long cycle length (CL1) (mean 884 msec) and a short cycle length (CL2) (mean 557 msec). CL1 was sinus rhythm, and CL2, an atrial paced rhythm. Repetitive atrial firing occurred in two patients at CL, and in all patients at CL2. Of the former two patients (group 2), the zone of repetitive atrial firing was markedly widened in one at CL2 due to a shortening of atrial functional refractory period (FRP) at CL2. In the other, zone of repetitive atrial firing could not be totally defined due to induction of sustained atrial flutter preventing definition of atrial FRP. The occurrence of repetitive atrial firing at only CL2 in 12 patients (group 1) reflected: 1) a shortening of atrial FRP from 294 ± 11 msec at CL, to 242 ± 10 msec at CL2 (mean ± SEM; P < 0.01), allowing delivery of A2 at shorter coupling intervals (9); 2) the new occurrence of repetitive atrial firing at A,-A2 coupling intervals achievable at both cycle lengths (1); or 3) both effects (2).In conclusion, decrease of cycle length potentiated atrial vulnerability. This demonstration implies that atrial pacing could potentiate occurrence of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation or flutter.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995

Definition of the best prediction criteria of the time domain signal-averaged electrocardiogram for serious arryhthmic events in the postinfarction period

Nabil El-Sherif; Pablo Denes; Richard J. Katz; Robert J. Capone; L. Brent Mitchell; Mark D. Carlson; Robin Reynolds-Haertle; Signal-Averaged Electrocardiogram; Saecg Substudy Investigators

Objective. The goal of this study was to establish guidelines for the prognostic use of the time domain signal-averaged electrocardiogram (ECG) after myocardial infarction. Background. Previous studies of the prognostic use of the signal-averaged ECG in postinfarction patients had one or more of the following limitations: a small study group, empiric definition of an abnormal recording and possible bias in the selection of high risk groups or classification of arrhythmic events, or both. To correct for these limitations, a substudy was conducted in conjunction with the Cardiac Arrhythmia Suppression Trial (CAST). Methods. Ten centers recruited 1,211 patients with acute myocardial infarction without application of the ejection fraction or Holter criteria restrictions of the main CAST protocol. Several clinical variables, ventricular arrhythmias on the Holter recording, ejection fraction and six signal-averaged ECG variables were analyzed. Patients with bundle branch block were exluded from the analysis, and the remaining 1,158 were followed for up to 1 year after infarction. The classification of arrhythmic events was reviewed independently by the CAST Events Committee. Results. During an average (±SD) follow-up of 10.3 ± 3.2 months, 45 patients had a serious arrhythmic event (nonfatal ventricular tachycardia or sudden cardiac arrhythmic death). A Cox regression analysis with only the six signal-averaged ECG variables indicated that the filtered QRS duration at 40 Hz ≥120 ms (QRSD-40 Hz) at a cutpoint ≥120 ms was the most predictive criterion of arrhythmic events. In a regression analysis that included all clinical, Holter and ejection fraction variables, a QRSD-40 Hz ≥120 ms was the most significant predictor (p Conclusions. The signal-averaged ECG predicts serious arrhythmic events in the first year after infarction better than do clinical, ejection fraction and ventricular arrhythmia variables, and QRSD-40 Hz ≥120 ms provides the best predictive criterion in this clinical setting.


Circulation | 1979

Significance of block distal to the His bundle induced by atrial pacing in patients with chronic bifascicular block.

Ramesh C. Dhingra; C Wyndham; Robert A. Bauernfeind; Steven Swiryn; Prakash C. Deedwania; T. C. Smith; Pablo Denes; K M Rosen

SUMMARYTwenty-one of 496 (4%) patients with chronic bifascicular block, studied and followed prospectively, had block distal to the His bundle (BDH) induced by atrial pacing during initial electrophysiologic studies. In six, BDH was noted during pacing-induced atrioventricular (AV) nodal Wenckebach periods (at paced rates of 150–190 beats/min), with BDH in the short HH cycles after the AV nodal blocked P (long cycle). The AH interval was normal in all six patients and HV was normal in four. None of the six patients has developed AV block during a mean follow-up of 5.33 ± 0.48 years.In 15 patients, pacing-induced BDH was noted during intact AV nodal conduction (paced rate of 80–200 beats/min). The AH interval was prolonged in one, and HV was prolonged in 10 of the 15 patients. During a mean follow-up of 3.4 ± 0.59 years, seven of these patients developed AV block, one had treadmill-provoked AV block, and two died suddenly (major morbid event in 10 of 15 patients).In conclusion, BDH induced by atrial pacing is an infrequent finding in patients with bifascicular block, and can be a functional as well as a pathologic response. The latter is associated with a high risk of major morbid events (AV block and sudden death).

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Ramesh C. Dhingra

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Christopher Wyndham

University of Illinois at Chicago

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F Amat-y-Leon

University of Illinois at Chicago

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D Wu

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Marilyn D. Ezri

Rush University Medical Center

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Robert A. Bauernfeind

University of Illinois at Chicago

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C Wyndham

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Eugene Uretz

Rush University Medical Center

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