Abstract

Using 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic recordings and 120-lead body surface potential maps, prevailing cardiac rate and rhythm, incidence and frequency of dysrhythm and rate and pattern of ventricular repolarization at the body surface were compared in 17 infants at risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and 17 age- and sex-matched control subjects. Sinus rhythm was the prevailing rhythm in both study groups and there were no intergroup differences in average overall awake or asleep sinus rates, nor in temporal variability of sinus rate. Atrial and ventricular ectopic activity were equally uncommon in both study groups. Although there were smooth and bipolar body surface distributions of ST-T and QRST time integrals in both study groups, the average rate of ventricular repolarization (QTc), measured from the 12-lead electrocardiogram, 120-lead body surface potential maps and 24-hour electrocardiography, was consistently shorter in the at-risk group than in the control group. However, temporal variability of QTc was not different between the 2 groups. Thus, significant cardiac dysrhythm and QT prolongation are not found in infants at increased risk for SIDS. Rather, there is an abbreviated ventricular repolarization interval in at-risk infants. In combination with the findings of intergroup similarity of average sinus rate and temporal variability of sinus rate and ventricular repolarization rate, the data suggest a subtle, constant difference in cardiac autonomic activity, most likely an Increase in sympathetic tone, in at-risk subjects. The role of this altered cardiac autonomic activity in the causation of SIDS remains undetermined.

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