sábado, agosto 18, 2007

Efecto del Taser en Ritmo Cardiaco

Cardiac Monitoring of Human Subjects Exposed to the Taser®
Saul D. Levine, Christian M. Sloane, Theodore C. Chan, James V. Dunford and Gary M. Vilke. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, San Diego (UCSD) Medical Center, San Diego.
Journal of Emergency Medicine Volume 33, Issue 2, August 2007, Pages 113-117

Abstract
The Taser® (TASER International, Scottsdale, AZ) is a high-voltage, low-amperage device used by many law enforcement agencies. Our objective in this study was to evaluate for rhythm changes utilizing cardiac monitoring during deployment of the Taser® on volunteers.

A prospective, observational study evaluated law enforcement personnel who had continuous electrocardiographic monitoring immediately before, during, and after having a voluntary exposure to the Taser X-26®. Changes in cardiac rate, rhythm, ectopy, morphology, and conduction intervals were measured.

A total of 105 subjects were evaluated. The mean shock duration was 3.0 s (range 0.9–5 s). Mean heart rate increased 15 beats/min (95% CI 12.6–18.3), from 122 beats/min before shock to 137 beats/min immediately after shock. One subject had a single premature ventricular contraction both before and after the shock, but no other subject developed ectopy or dysrhythmia. Poor inter-rater agreement prevented determination of the overall effect of shock on conduction intervals. However, several interpretable tracings demonstrated change in QT duration—either shortening or prolongation after shock. Human subjects exposed to a brief shock from the Taser® developed significant increases in heart rate, but there were no cardiac dysrhythmias or morphologic changes.

Alterations in the QT interval were observed in some subjects but their true incidence and clinical significance are unknown.