Abstract

Abstract Objective Covid-19 infection has been declared as a pandemic disease by the World Health Organization (WHO) and has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality. More than 400 million people diagnosed with the disease has been reported until February 2022 [1]. Covid-19 infection mostly progresses with lung involvement and pneumonia, however, its effects on the cardiovascular system are also well-known. Studies have reported that Covid 19 infection can trigger cardiac events such as acute myocardial damage, acute myocarditis, acute coronary syndrome (ACS), ventricular arrhythmias, cardiogenic shock, and cardiac arrest [2]. Electrocardiogram (ECG) is an important tool to diagnose cardiac involvement. QTc interval, QT dispersion, Tp-e interval, Tp-e/QTc ratio are defined as ventricular repolarization parameters and these parameters are associated with increased risk of ventricular arrhythmia [3,4]. In our study, we aimed to evaluate to predict ventricular arrhythmia by ECG in Covid-19 patients. Methods Our study is a single-center, cross-sectional study. Patients diagnosed with Covid-19 in our center between July and October 2020 were included. 408 patients with positive SARS-CoV2 PCR test were detected and the ECGs of the patients were recorded at admission and 15 days after symptomatic recovery. After the exclusion criteria, remained 91 patients were analyzed. Conduction parameters (PR and QRS durations) and repolarization parameters (QTc interval, QT dispersion, Tp-e interval and Tp-e/QTc ratio) were evaluated in 12-lead ECG recordings. Results Ninety-one patients with Covid-19 infection were included. The group were consisted of 47 male (52%) and 44 female (48%). The mean age was 50.4 years. As a result of the statistical analysis, no significant difference was observed between the groups in terms of PR interval (142.2±21.4 ms vs. 140.1±19.0 ms; p=0.312). QRS duration was found significantly higher during active infection (91.4±12.2 ms vs. 88.8±10.9 ms; p=0.022). The mean QTc duration was detected longer in the first ECG, but no statistically significant difference was observed between the two groups (426.1±23.6 ms vs. 422.5±26.2 ms; p=0.237). QT dispersion (35.2±7.3 ms vs. 27.7±7.8 ms; p<0.001), Tp-e interval (86.7±10.1 ms vs. 76.1±9.9 ms; p<0.001) and Tp-e/QTc ratio (0.204±0.026 vs 0.180±0.025; p<0.001) were found significantly higher during active infection Conclusion In our study, QRS complex, QT dispersion, Tp-e interval, Tp-e/QTc ratio were significantly higher during active infection. We considered these parameters as a contributor of the increased mortality by inducing ventricular arrhythmia and sudden death in Covid-19 patients during active infection. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None.

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