Although ventricular arrhythmias are well described in adults with mitral valve prolapse, this association remains controversial in children. To assess the incidence of ventricular premature complexes (VPCs), 103 consecutive children with mitral valve (MV) prolapse confirmed by echocardiography were evaluated prospectively by treadmill exercise and ambulatory ECG. A group of 50 normal children with clinical, ECG, or echocardiographic evidence of heart disease who had undergone treadmill exercise and ambulatory ECG served as controls. In the group with MV prolapse, 16 patients had VPCs with treadmill exercise and 39 had VPCs on ambulatory ECG. High-grade ventricular ectopy (multiform VPCs, couplets, or ventricular tachycardia) was recorded in four patients with MV prolapse during treadmill exercise and in eight during ambulatory ECG. In contrast, no control patient had a single VPC in response to treadmill exercise and only four control patients had rare uniform VPCs on ambulatory ECG. Neither physical examination findings, standard ECG results, nor symptoms could be correlated with VPCs in the patients with MV prolapse. Although the prognostic implications of these findings are uncertain, this study demonstrates that potentially serious ventricular arrhythmias are frequently observed in children with MV prolapse.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0022-3476(84)80071-2 | DOI Listing |
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