Brugada syndrome (BS) is associated with sudden cardiac death and the markers for ventricular fibrillation (VF) remain unclear, so the activation-recovery interval (ARI) dispersion and recovery time (RT) dispersion were investigated as possible markers in 20 subjects with BS (BS group) and 22 healthy individuals (H group). The 20 BS subjects were divided into 8 cases with documented VF (BS-VF group), 3 of which had recurrences, and 12 without (BS-N group). The corrected dispersion measurements from the standard 12-lead ECG of the QT interval (QTcd), ARI (ARIcd) and RT (RTcd) were compared among the groups. There were significant differences noted between the BS-VF and BS-N groups for the ARIcd and the RTcd, but not for the QTcd. Further, there were critical differences, 150 ms(1/2), observed for the ARIcd and RTcd, and these were associated with a prolongation of the maximum ARI or RT, shortening of the minimum ARI or RT, and prolongation only of the maximum QT for the QTcd. Susceptibility to VF may be predicted by the ARIcd or RTcd in BS.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1253/circj.66.549DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

aricd rtcd
16
recovery time
8
markers ventricular
8
ventricular fibrillation
8
brugada syndrome
8
prolongation maximum
8
clinical significance
4
dispersion
4
significance dispersion
4
dispersion activation--recovery
4

Similar Publications

Brugada syndrome (BS) is associated with sudden cardiac death and the markers for ventricular fibrillation (VF) remain unclear, so the activation-recovery interval (ARI) dispersion and recovery time (RT) dispersion were investigated as possible markers in 20 subjects with BS (BS group) and 22 healthy individuals (H group). The 20 BS subjects were divided into 8 cases with documented VF (BS-VF group), 3 of which had recurrences, and 12 without (BS-N group). The corrected dispersion measurements from the standard 12-lead ECG of the QT interval (QTcd), ARI (ARIcd) and RT (RTcd) were compared among the groups.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!