Increased Short-Term Beat-To-Beat Variability of QT Interval in Patients with Acromegaly

Cardiovascular diseases, including ventricular arrhythmias are responsible for increased mortality in patients with acromegaly. Acromegaly may cause repolarization abnormalities such as QT prolongation and impairment of repolarization reserve enhancing liability to arrhythmia. The aim of this study...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-04, Vol.10 (4), p.e0125639-e0125639
Hauptverfasser: Orosz, Andrea, Csajbók, Éva, Czékus, Csilla, Gavallér, Henriette, Magony, Sándor, Valkusz, Zsuzsanna, Várkonyi, Tamás T, Nemes, Attila, Baczkó, István, Forster, Tamás, Wittmann, Tibor, Papp, Julius Gy, Varró, András, Lengyel, Csaba
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cardiovascular diseases, including ventricular arrhythmias are responsible for increased mortality in patients with acromegaly. Acromegaly may cause repolarization abnormalities such as QT prolongation and impairment of repolarization reserve enhancing liability to arrhythmia. The aim of this study was to determine the short-term beat-to-beat QT variability in patients with acromegaly. Thirty acromegalic patients (23 women and 7 men, mean age±SD: 55.7±10.4 years) were compared with age- and sex-matched volunteers (mean age 51.3±7.6 years). Cardiac repolarization parameters including frequency corrected QT interval, PQ and QRS intervals, duration of terminal part of T waves (Tpeak-Tend) and short-term variability of QT interval were evaluated. All acromegalic patients and controls underwent transthoracic echocardiographic examination. Autonomic function was assessed by means of five standard cardiovascular reflex tests. Comparison of the two groups revealed no significant differences in the conventional ECG parameters of repolarization (QT: 401.1±30.6 ms vs 389.3±16.5 ms, corrected QT interval: 430.1±18.6 ms vs 425.6±17.3 ms, QT dispersion: 38.2±13.2 ms vs 36.6±10.2 ms; acromegaly vs control, respectively). However, short-term beat-to-beat QT variability was significantly increased in acromegalic patients (4.23±1.03 ms vs 3.02±0.80, P
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0125639