Abstract

Although coexistence of atrioventricular conduction disturbances with sick sinus syndrome (SSS), so-called binodal disease (BND), is a frequently encountered disorder, its clinical significance and electrophysiological characteristics remain unknown. One hundred and seven patients with SSS were divided into BND (n=30) and N-BND groups (n=77). Sinus cycle length, sinus node recovery time (SRT), sino-atrial conduction time (SACT), the number of isolated sinus node electrograms, atrio-His (AH) interval, His-ventricular (HV) interval, intra-atrial conduction time (PA intervals) and QRS width were measured. In addition, the prevalence of bundle-branch block was obtained. The parameters of sino-atrial and intra-atrial conduction were significantly longer in the BND group: SRT (5,070+/-2,628 vs 3,122+/-1,856 ms, p<0.05), SACT (115+/-30 vs 87+/-21 ms, p<0.05), PA intervals (56+/-13 vs 41+/-8 ms, p<0.05). The BND group was more likely to have atrial fibrillation than the N-BND group (83.3% vs 53.2%, p<0.01). HV interval, QRS width and the prevalence of associated bundle-branch block did not differ between the 2 groups. BND patients not only had sino-atrial and atrioventricular node dysfunction, but also widespread atrial conduction disturbances. Thus, in the clinical setting BND should be categorized as severe SSS.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call