Willem Einthoven and the birth of clinical electrocardiography a hundred years ago.

@article{Barold2003WillemEA,
  title={Willem Einthoven and the birth of clinical electrocardiography a hundred years ago.},
  author={S. Serge Barold},
  journal={Cardiac electrophysiology review},
  year={2003},
  volume={7 1},
  pages={
          99-104
        }
}
  • S. Barold
  • Published 2003
  • Medicine
  • Cardiac electrophysiology review
The first electrocardiogram (ECG) from the intact human heart was recorded with a mercury capillary electrometer by Augustus Waller in May 1887 at St. Mary's Hospital, London. The tracings were poor and exhibited only 2 distorted deflections. Willem Einthoven (1860-1927) who was professor of physiology at the University of Leiden, The Netherlands, began his studies of the ECG with the mercury capillary electrometer, and improved its distortion mathematically so that he was finally able to… 
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