Ag. Manolis et al., CIRCADIAN VARIABILITY OF VENTRICULAR-TACHYCARDIA QRS DURATION, IN ICDPATIENTS WITH DILATED CARDIOMYOPATHY, HEARTWEB, 4(1), 1998, pp. 60-66
The capability of the contemporary devices to digitize and store the E
GM has been utilized in tachycardia diagnosis and characterization. Au
tomatic EGM width measurement during episodes of ventricular tachycard
ias (VT) is a new technical advance. Aim of the study is to investigat
e the circadian behavior of VT QRS variability in patients (pts) with
dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in whom an ICE (Medtronic 7223) was impla
nted. Ten pts (8M, 2F, 69+/- 5 years) with DCM were included in the st
udy. In the VT detection algorithm the EGM (far field) width criterion
was programmed ''passive''. We evaluated 146 episodes of VT. As an in
dex of QRS duration variability we considered the coefficient of varia
nce (CV= SD/meanX100) of the width of the last 8 VT QRS complexes. We
compared the CV of the QRS width of all the VT episodes during day ver
sus night time. 102 VT episodes occurred during the day and 44 during
the night. The mean VT cycle length recorded during the day and night
time was 375+/- 32 ms and 398+/- 27 ms respectively (p=NS). The mean v
alue of CV of the QRS duration during the day and night time was 15.1/- 2.8 and 16.1+/- 2.7 respectively (p=0.03). In conclusion there is a
circadian variability in the VT QRS duration in pts with DCM. The VT
QRS duration is less stable during the night compared to the day time.
It is possible that the nychtamer alterations of the sympathovagal ba
lance modifies the electrophysiological properties of the arrhythmogen
ic substrate.