QT dispersion was retrospectively evaluated in 30 patients with Becker muscular dystrophy and 26 healthy controls to assess sudden death risk, though results are not reported in the truncated abstract.
Case-Control (n=56)
Is QT dispersion a valid method to foresee the risk of sudden death in patients with Becker muscular dystrophy?
Sudden cardiac death is a dramatic, undesirable event that can often result from cardiomyopathies. To investigate the validity of the QTdispersion (QTd) in revealing regional heterogeneity of repolarisation, with consequent possibility of sudden death,1 we evaluated ECGs of patients affected by Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). This is an X linked recessive muscular dystrophy caused by dystrophin anomalies in striated muscles with myocardial involvement2–4 and consequent dilated cardiomyopathy, ventricular arrhythmias and, in 30% of cases, sudden cardiac death.5,6 The study was retrospective using the clinically validated database of ECGs and echocardiograms (echo recorded together with the ECG) from 30 BMD patients (mean (SD) age 25 (10) years) with variable stages of myocardial involvement, and 26 healthy, age matched controls. All subjects underwent a physical examination, blood analyses, and M mode and two dimensional echocardiography. The diagnosis of the type of muscular dystrophy in Becker patients was confirmed by DNA analysis (polymerase chain reaction) and by reduced dystrophin labelling from the immunohistochemical examination of biopsy samples. We excluded the ECGs from subjects with ST-T anomalies on the 12 lead ECG, and with sustained ventricular arrhythmias at 24 hour Holter monitoring, electrolyte …
Gerardo Nigro (Fri,) conducted a case-control in Becker muscular dystrophy (n=56). QT dispersion (QTd) evaluation vs. Healthy age-matched controls was evaluated on QT dispersion (QTd) to reveal regional heterogeneity of repolarisation. QT dispersion was retrospectively evaluated in 30 patients with Becker muscular dystrophy and 26 healthy controls to assess sudden death risk, though results are not reported in the truncated abstract.
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