Abstract

Abstract Background Our aim was to describe the prevalence and prognostic significance of electrocardiographic features in patients with Takotsubo syndrome (TTS). Methods Our data come from the Spanish Multicenter REgistry of TAKOtsubo syndrome (RETAKO). All patients with complete electrocardiogram were included. Results 246 patients were studied, mean age was 71.3±11.5 and 215 (87.4%) were women. ST-segment elevation was seen in 143 patients (59.1%) and was present in ≥2 wall leads in 97 (39.8%). Exclusive elevation in inferior leads was infrequent (5 - 2.0%). After 48 hours, 198 patients (88.0%) developed negative T-waves in a median of 8 leads with a mean amplitude of 0.7±0.5 mV. Mean corrected QT interval was 520±72 ms and it was independently associated with the primary endpoint of all-cause death and nonfatal cardiovascular events (p=0.002) and all-cause death (p=0.008). A higher heart rate at admission was also an independent predictor of the primary endpoint (p=0.001) and of developing acute pulmonary edema (p=0.04). ST-segment elevation with reciprocal depression was an independent predictor of all-cause death (p=0.04). Absence of ST-segment deviation was a protective factor (p=0.005) for the primary endpoint. Arrhythmias were independently associated with cardiogenic shock (p<0.001). Conclusion Prolonged corrected QT interval, arrhythmia, heart rate at admission and broader repolarization alterations are associated with a poor outcome in TTS. Typical ECG at admission and after 48h. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None

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