AI Article Synopsis

  • Myocardial infarction survivors face high mortality rates despite better treatments; accurate risk assessment is necessary for improving their care.
  • A study evaluated the fragmented QRS complex as a potential risk predictor among 609 hospitalized patients and tracked them for 5 years.
  • Although 46.8% of patients had fragmented QRS complexes, the findings showed no significant difference in overall or cardiac mortality compared to those without fragmentation, but patients with fragmentation did experience larger heart damage.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite advances in coronary revascularization and in heart failure management, myocardial infarction survivors remain at substantially increased mortality risk. Precise risk assessment and risk-adapted follow-up care are crucial to improve their outcomes. Recently, the fragmented QRS complex, i.e. the presence of additional spikes within the QRS complexes on a 12-lead electrocardiogram, has been discussed as a potential non-invasive risk predictor in cardiac patients.

Hypothesis: The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic meaning of the fragmented QRS complex in myocardial infarction survivors.

Methods: 609 patients with narrow QRS complexes <120 ms were included in a prospective cohort study while hospitalized for myocardial infarction and followed for 5 years.

Results: The prevalence of the fragmented QRS complex in these patients amounted to 46.8% (285 patients). These patients had no increased hazard of all-cause death (HR 0.84, 95%-CI 0.45-1.57, p = 0.582) with a mortality rate of 6.0% compared to 7.1% in patients without QRS fragmentations. Furthermore, the risks of cardiac death (HR 1.28, 95%-CI 0.49-3.31, p = 0.613) and of non-cardiac death (HR 0.6, 95%-CI 0.26-1.43, p = 0.25) were not significantly different in patients with QRS fragmentations. However, patients with QRS fragmentations had increased serum creatine kinase concentrations (1438U/l vs. 1160U/l, p = 0.039) and reduced left ventricular ejection fractions (52% vs. 54%, p = 0.011).

Conclusions: The hypothesis that QRS fragmentation might be a prognostic parameter in survivors of myocardial infarction was not confirmed. But those with QRS fragmentation had larger myocardial infarctions, as measured by creatine kinase and left ventricular ejection fraction.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10797824PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clc.24218DOI Listing

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