Abstract
Eisenmenger syndrome represents severe, irreversible, and end-stage pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) associated with congenital heart defects. For long-term outcome optimal right ventricular (RV) adaptation is crucial with precise assessment of its hypertrophy, dilatation and function. Associations of electrocardiographic (ECG) and echocardiographic (ECHO) RV characteristics were analyzed. Included were 52 patients (39F/13M), median age 45 years (24-78). Following ECG parameters were analyzed: Butler-Leggett formula (B-L), Sokolow-Lyon criterion (S-L), QRS duration (QRS), maximum spatial QRS vector magnitude (QRS max); and ECHO parameters: RV diameter (RVd), RV wall thickness (RVAW), RV/LV function. Following significant ECG-ECHO associations were demonstrated: S-L criterion and B-L formula with RVAW (p 120 ms only with severely dilated RV (RVd > 45 mm), while QRS max 33 mm); A new combined scoring system was introduced. In Eisenmenger syndrome RV hypertrophy is compensatory; diagnosis of prognostically unfavorable RV dilatation is therefore important. Combined ECG-ECHO analysis enables more accurate risk stratification. QRS duration > 120 ms seems to be a late marker; QRS max together with ECHO parameters may help to distinguish patients at higher risk for clinical deterioration (Tab. 3, Fig. 8, Ref. 53).
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