3 research outputs found

    Sudden death in noncoronary heart disease is associated with delayed paced ventricular activation

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    Background-Slowed or delayed myocardial activation and dispersed refractoriness predispose to reentrant excitation that may lead to ventricular fibrillation (VF). Increased ventricular electrogram duration (DeltaED) in response to extrastimuli and increased S1S2 coupling intervals at which electrogram duration starts to increase (S1S2(delay)) are seen both in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in those at risk of VF and in patients with idiopathic VF (IVF). Methods and Results-DeltaED and S1S2(delay) have been measured using paced electrogram fractionation analysis in 266 patients with noncoronary heart disease. Of these, one group of 61 patients had a history of VF and included 21 HCM, 17 IVF, 13 long-QT syndrome (LQTS), 5 dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), and 5 others. These were compared with 205 patients with similar diseases with no VF history (non-VF group) and a control group (n=12) without heart disease. Results from HCM VF patients (DeltaED, 19+/-3.3 ms; S1S2(delay), 350+/-9.7 ms) differed sharply from observations in HCM non-VF patients (DeltaED, 7.3+/-1.35 ms; S1S2(delay), 312+/-6.7 ms; P Conclusions-Slowed or delayed myocardial activation is a common feature in patients with noncoronary heart disease with a history of VF, and its assessment may allow the prospective prediction of VF risk in these patients
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