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Title: The value of a family history of sudden death in patients with diagnostic type I Brugada ECG pattern
Author(s): Sarkozy, A.
Sorgente, A.
Boussy, T.
Casado, R.
Paparella, G.
Capulzini, L.
Chierchia, G.B.
Yazaki, Y.
Asmundis, C. de
Coomans, D.
Brugada, J.
Brugada, P.
Publication year: 2011
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: European Heart Journal
ISSN: 0195-668X
Volume: vol. 32
Issue: iss. 17
Start page: p. 2153
End page: p. 2160
Annotation: Sarkozy, Andrea Sorgente, Antonio Boussy, Tim Casado, Ruben Paparella, Gaetano Capulzini, Lucio Chierchia, Gian-Battista Yazaki, Yoshinao De Asmundis, Carlo Coomans, Danny Brugada, Josep Brugada, Pedro England Eur Heart J. 2011 Sep;32(17):2153-60. Epub 2011 Jul 4.
Abstract: AIMS: We sought to investigate the value of a family history of sudden death (SD) in Brugada syndrome (BS). METHODS AND RESULTS: Two hundred and eighty consecutive patients (mean age: 41 +/- 18 years, 168 males) with diagnostic type I Brugada ECG pattern were included. Sudden death occurred in 69 (43%) of 157 families. One hundred and ten SDs were analysed. During follow-up VF (ventricular fibrillation) or SD-free survival rate was not different between patients with or without a family history of SD of a first-degree relative, between patients with or without a family history of multiple SD of a first-degree relative at any age and between patients with or without a family history of SD in first-degree relatives </=35 years. One patient had family history of SD of two first-degree relative </=35 years with arrhythmic event during follow-up. In univariate analysis male gender (P = 0.01), aborted SD (P < 0.001), syncope (P = 0.04), spontaneous type I ECG (P < 0.001), and inducibility during electrophysiological (EP) study (P < 0.001) were associated with worse prognosis. The absence of syncope, aborted SD, spontaneous type I ECG, and inducibility during EP study was associated with a significantly better prognosis (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Family history of SD is not predictive for future arrhythmic events even if considering only SD in first-degree relatives or SD in first-degree relatives at a young age. The absence of syncope, aborted SD, spontaneous type I ECG, and inducibility during EP study is associated with a good five-year prognosis.
Subject: NCEBP 14: Cardiovascular diseases
Organization: UMCN Extern
Cardiology
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/98470

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