Open Veterinary Journal (Jul 2022)

A pilot study of patch Holter electrocardiograph recordings in healthy cats

  • Mizuki Ogawa,
  • Saran Fatim Kaba,
  • Hirosumi Miyakawa,
  • Huai-hsun Hsu,
  • Yuichi Miyagawa,
  • Naoyuki Takemura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5455/OVJ.2022.v12.i4.10
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
pp. 489 – 494

Abstract

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Background: A patch Holter electrocardiograph (P-Holter) is cordless, making it lightweight unlike the conventional Holter electrocardiograph (C-Holter). A P-Holter can also take continuous measurements. For up to 14 days without replacing the battery or SD card. Aim: The purpose of this study was to compare the performance of the P-Holter and the C-Holter in healthy cats. Additionally, we aimed to investigate whether multiday recordings with the P-Holter decrease sympathetic nerve activity or improve the accuracy of arrhythmia detection. Methods: Five healthy domestic short-haired cats were used for this study. Both a P-Holter and C-Holter were used on the first day, but only the P-Holter was used on days 2 to 6. The evaluated variables were the analyzable time of both Holter types, heart rate (HR), HR variability (HRV) and the number of arrhythmia occurrences. Results: For two out of the five cats, measurement of P-Holter was interrupted. Eventually, continuous recordings using the P-Holters were able to be collected from all individuals for 6 days. The 24 h analyzable time from the P-Holter and C-Holter was almost identical (p = 0.94). The 24 h mean HR did not differ across Holter types (p = 0.67). In addition, the timing of the occurrences of arrhythmias was almost identical to the P-Holter and C-Holter. Results of HRV suggested that sympathetic nerve activity was likely to decrease and vagal nerve activity was likely to increase after 4 to 5 days of measurement, compared to the second day of measurement (p < 0.05). When only the P-Holter was installed, the number of arrhythmia occurrences was similar on days 2 to 6. Conclusion: In this study, the P-Holter may be as useful as the C-Holter in cats with suspected intermittent arrhythmias, although these P-Holters were placed on cats without a clinical indication. However, cats may have individual differences in their adaptation to the device. P-Holter recordings taken for more than 4 to 5 days may allow the cat to acclimate to the device and reduce sympathetic nerve activity. The accuracy of arrhythmia detection across multiday P-Holter recordings requires further investigation using clinical cases.

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