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Advanced Electrocardiographic Predictors of Sudden Death in Familial DysautonomiaTo identify accurate predictors for the risk of sudden death in patients with familial dysautonomia (FD). Ten-minute resting high-fidelity 12-lead ECGs were obtained from 14 FD patients and 14 age/gender-matched healthy subjects. Multiple conventional and advanced ECG parameters were studied for their ability to predict sudden death in FD over a subsequent 4.5-year period, including multiple indices of linear and non-linear heart rate variability (HRV); QT variability; waveform complexity; high frequency QRS; and derived Frank-lead parameters. Four of the 14 FD patients died suddenly during the follow-up period, usually with concomitant pulmonary disorder. The presence of low vagally-mediated HRV was the ECG finding most predictive of sudden death. Concomitant left ventricular hypertrophy and other ECG abnormalities such as increased QTc and JTc intervals, spatial QRS-T angles, T-wave complexity, and QT variability were also present in FD patients, suggesting that structural heart disease is fairly common in FD. Although excessive or unopposed cardiac vagal (relative to sympathetic) activity has been postulated as a contributor to sudden death in FD, the presence of low vagally-mediated HRV was paradoxically the best predictor of sudden death. However, we suggest that low vagally-mediated HRV be construed not as a direct cause of sudden death in FD, but rather as an effect of concurrent pathological processes, especially hypoxia due to pulmonary disorders and sleep apnea, that themselves increase the risk of sudden death in FD and simultaneously diminish HRV. We speculate that adenosine may play a role in sudden death in FD, possibly independently of vagal activity, and that adenosine inhibitors such as theophylline might therefore be useful as prophylaxis in this disorder.
Document ID
20070030843
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Solaimanzadeh, I.
(National Space Biomedical Research Inst. Houston, TX, United States)
Schlegel, T. T.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Greco, E. C.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
DePalma, J. L.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Starc, V.
(Ljubljana Univ. Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Marthol, H.
(Erlangen-Nuernberg Univ. Erlangen, Germany)
Tutaj, M.
(Jagiellonian Univ. Cracow, Poland)
Buechner, S.
(Florence Univ. Italy)
Axelrod, F. B.
(New York Univ. Medical Center New York, NY, United States)
Hilz, M. J.
(Erlangen-Nuernberg Univ. Erlangen, Germany)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2007
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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