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Effects on repolarization using dynamic QT interval monitoring in long-QT patients following left cardiac sympathetic denervation

  • Christopher V. Desimone
  • , J. Martijn Bos
  • , Katy M. Bos
  • , Jackson J. Liang
  • , Nikhil A. Patel
  • , David O. Hodge
  • , Amit Noheria
  • , Samuel J. Asirvatham
  • , Michael J. Ackerman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Videoscopic left cardiac sympathetic denervation (LCSD) is an adjunct therapy for reduction of arrhythmia-induced events in patients with long-QT syndrome (LQTS). LCSD reduces LQTS-triggered breakthrough cardiac events. The temporal effects of QTc changes post-LCSD have not been studied. Methods We utilized continuous QTc monitoring on 72 patients with LQTS. We evaluated acute and long-term QTc changes in comparison to 12-lead ECG-derived QTc values prior to surgery, 24 hours postsurgery, and at follow up ≥3 months. Results Seventy-two patients underwent LCSD at our institution (46% male, mean age at LCSD was 14 ± 10 years). The mean baseline, pre-LCSD QTc was 505 ± 56 ms, which had decreased significantly at ≥3 months post-LCSD to 491 ± 40 ms (P = 0.001). QTc monitoring revealed that the majority of the cohort (53/72; 74%) had a transient increase >30 ms in QTc from baseline, with an average maximum increase of 72 ± 30 ms. Resolution within 10 ms of baseline or less occurred in 57% (30/53) at 24 hours post-LCSD. Conclusions Although LQTS patients may have a paradoxically increased QTc post-LCSD, the effects are transient in most patients. Importantly, no patients experienced any arrhythmias in the postoperative setting related to this transient rise in QTc.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)434-439
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
Volume26
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2015

Keywords

  • ICD
  • QTc
  • arrhythmia
  • left cardiac sympathetic denervation
  • long-QT syndrome
  • sudden cardiac death
  • syncope

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