BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to systematically study diagnostic and prognostic electrocardiographic (ECG) characteristics of arrhythmogenic right ventricle dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C). METHODS AND RESULTS: The patient population included 50 patients with ARVD/C (27 males, 23 females; mean age 38+/-15 years). We also analyzed the ECG of 50 age- and gender-matched normal control subject and 28 consecutive patients who presented with right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) tachycardia. Right bundle-branch block (RBBB) was present in 11 patients (22%). T-wave inversions in V1 through V3 were observed in 85% of ARVD/C patients in the absence of RBBB compared with none in RVOT and normal controls, respectively (P<0.0001); epsilon waves were seen in 33%, and a QRS duration > or =110 ms in V1 through V3 was present in 64% of patients. Among those without RBBB, our newly proposed criterion of "prolonged S-wave upstroke in V1 through V3" > or =55 ms was the most prevalent ECG feature (95%) and correlated with disease severity and induction of VT on electrophysiological study. This feature also best distinguished ARVD/C (diffuse and localized) from RVOT. CONCLUSIONS: A prolonged S-wave upstroke in V1 through V3 is the most frequent ECG finding in ARVD/C and should be considered as a diagnostic ECG marker.
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to systematically study diagnostic and prognostic electrocardiographic (ECG) characteristics of arrhythmogenic right ventricle dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C). METHODS AND RESULTS: The patient population included 50 patients with ARVD/C (27 males, 23 females; mean age 38+/-15 years). We also analyzed the ECG of 50 age- and gender-matched normal control subject and 28 consecutive patients who presented with right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) tachycardia. Right bundle-branch block (RBBB) was present in 11 patients (22%). T-wave inversions in V1 through V3 were observed in 85% of ARVD/C patients in the absence of RBBB compared with none in RVOT and normal controls, respectively (P<0.0001); epsilon waves were seen in 33%, and a QRS duration > or =110 ms in V1 through V3 was present in 64% of patients. Among those without RBBB, our newly proposed criterion of "prolonged S-wave upstroke in V1 through V3" > or =55 ms was the most prevalent ECG feature (95%) and correlated with disease severity and induction of VT on electrophysiological study. This feature also best distinguished ARVD/C (diffuse and localized) from RVOT. CONCLUSIONS: A prolonged S-wave upstroke in V1 through V3 is the most frequent ECG finding in ARVD/C and should be considered as a diagnostic ECG marker.
Authors: Daniel P Morin; Andreas C Mauer; Kathleen Gear; Wojciech Zareba; Steven M Markowitz; Frank I Marcus; Bruce B Lerman Journal: Am J Cardiol Date: 2010-04-27 Impact factor: 2.778
Authors: Frank I Marcus; William J McKenna; Duane Sherrill; Cristina Basso; Barbara Bauce; David A Bluemke; Hugh Calkins; Domenico Corrado; Moniek G P J Cox; James P Daubert; Guy Fontaine; Kathleen Gear; Richard Hauer; Andrea Nava; Michael H Picard; Nikos Protonotarios; Jeffrey E Saffitz; Danita M Yoerger Sanborn; Jonathan S Steinberg; Harikrishna Tandri; Gaetano Thiene; Jeffrey A Towbin; Adalena Tsatsopoulou; Thomas Wichter; Wojciech Zareba Journal: Circulation Date: 2010-02-19 Impact factor: 29.690
Authors: Gianfranco Buja; N A Mark Estes; Thomas Wichter; Domenico Corrado; Frank Marcus; Gaetano Thiene Journal: Prog Cardiovasc Dis Date: 2008 Jan-Feb Impact factor: 8.194
Authors: Frank I Marcus; Wojciech Zareba; Hugh Calkins; Jeffrey A Towbin; Cristina Basso; David A Bluemke; N A Mark Estes; Michael H Picard; Danita Sanborn; Gaetano Thiene; Thomas Wichter; David Cannom; David J Wilber; Melvin Scheinman; Henry Duff; James Daubert; Mario Talajic; Andrew Krahn; Michael Sweeney; Hasan Garan; Scott Sakaguchi; Bruce B Lerman; Charles Kerr; Jack Kron; Jonathan S Steinberg; Duane Sherrill; Kathleen Gear; Mary Brown; Patricia Severski; Slava Polonsky; Scott McNitt Journal: Heart Rhythm Date: 2009-03-11 Impact factor: 6.343