This book describes in detail the specific aspects of ECG during childhood and adolescence, pursuing an accessible, didactic and easy-to-read approach. Instructive, self-contained and intelligently written, it succeeds in making this diagnostic tool, the interpretation of which is especially complex in younger patients, more comprehensible, while also offering a sound and extensive reference guide for all those who diagnose young patients with electrocardiography.
Though ECG produces a relatively simple set of readings, its interpretation and diagnosis are complex. If misinterpreted, a "butterfly effect" of hidden, often neglected heart signals can lead to important and sometimes devastating consequences. Featuring an exceptionally wide range of ECG recordings and examples, the volume sheds new light on the importance of electrophysiological examinations for patients still in their developmental years and provides advice on the use of ECG in connection with recent regulations on the participation of children, adolescents and young athletes in sports.
Thanks to the variety of scenarios described, from the most frequent to the most insidious, this work will appeal to a broad readership, from cardiologists and pediatricians to family physicians, anesthesiologists, doctors in sports medicine, students and nurses.
About the Author: Gabriele Bronzetti works as a clinical pediatric cardiologist at the S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital in Bologna, Italy, and as Professor and tutor in the Master of Pediatric Cardiology at the University of Bologna. He got his degree in medicine in 1993 and, after specializing in Cardiology, he spent his fellowship at the University of Liège, Belgium, in 1997, and later in Toronto, Canada, for a Clinical fellowship in Electrophysiology at the Hospital for Sick Children. He is regular volunteer at the Mission Luisa Guidotti Hospital, Zimbabwe. Beside his academic publishing activity of papers, he is columnist for the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.