(Circulation. 1997;96:1551-1556.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of Western Ontario, Canada.
Background The diagnosis of the long-QT syndrome (LQTS) may be difficult to establish in patients with normal or borderline prolongation of the QT interval. Noninvasive markers are needed to identify patients with LQTS.
Methods and Results Fourteen patients with known LQTS, 9
unaffected family members, and 40 control subjects underwent modified
Bruce protocol exercise testing. The RT interval (peak of R wave to
peak of T wave) and rate-corrected RT interval (RTc) were measured
during exercise and recovery. The RT interval at 1 minute into recovery
was subtracted from the RT interval at a similar heart rate during
exercise (
RT). The RTc shortened by 61 milliseconds (ms) in the LQTS
patients compared with 23 to 26 ms in the other two groups
(P=.003 by ANOVA). The RT interval shortened in a linear
fashion in all patients but demonstrated persistent shortening during
recovery in the LQTS patients. This was manifested as a hysteresis loop
in the curve relating the RT interval to cycle length. The hysteresis
loop was present in 13 of 14 LQTS patients and only 4 of 40 control
subjects.
RT >25 ms had a sensitivity of 73%, a specificity of
92%, a positive predictive value of 79%, and a negative predictive
value of 90% for LQTS.
Conclusions Hysteresis of the RT interval with exercise may be useful for the diagnosis of LQTS.
Key Words: exercise electrocardiography intervals death, sudden
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