Differences in Brugada Syndrome Patients Through Ventricular Repolarization Analysis During Sleep

Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2019 Jul:2019:5638-5641. doi: 10.1109/EMBC.2019.8857930.

Abstract

Brugada syndrome (BS) is a genetic pathology that might cause sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients with a structurally normal heart. Repolarization disorders have been postulated as a potential substrate for triggering cardiac arrhythmia in BS, that usually occur at rest or during sleep. In this paper, we have characterized ventricular repolarization markers during sleep on patients suffering from BS. To this end, standard 12-lead ECG recordings were analyzed in a population of 110 BS patients (25 symptomatic). The QT and the T-wave peak to T-wave end intervals (respectively QT and Tpe) were assessed from lead V5. The linear relationship between these markers and the instantaneous heart rate period (RR interval) are determined during each hour and for the whole sleep period. From the models obtained, corrected QT and Tpe measures were then estimated for each patient at 60 beats/min (QT60 and Tpe60) and at the mean heart rate observed during the involved time interval (QTHR and TpeHR). Results show larger values for symptomatic patients in all markers, with significant differences with respect to the asymptomatic group in the case of Tpe (Tpe60: p = 0.0012; TpeHR: p = 0.0014). Moreover, the temporal profiles of these markers reveal major differences among BS subgroups during the last 3 hours of sleep, where symptomatic patients presented increased QT60/HR (p = 0.01) and Tpe60/HR (p <; 0.001), as compared to the initial sleep hours. We conclude that BS patients present different repolarization properties according to their symptomatology, especially during the final stage of sleep.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Arrhythmias, Cardiac
  • Brugada Syndrome* / diagnosis
  • Death, Sudden, Cardiac
  • Electrocardiography*
  • Heart Rate
  • Humans
  • Sleep