Abstract

Death due to acquired torsades de pointes usually is caused by ventricular fibrillation (VF), but the contributing factors to VF triggered by pause-dependent torsades de pointes are not understood. We evaluated 91 patients who fulfilled four criteria: (1) pause-dependent torsades de pointes; (2) prolonged QT interval and/or corrected QT (QTc) (>0.44 sec); (3) long-short initiation sequence; and (4) conditions known to induce pause-dependent torsades de pointes. There were 38 patients with a documented VF (group I) and 53 without VF (group II). Absolute and relative dispersions of QT and QTc were calculated based on the 12-lead standard ECG. Group I differed from group II with regard to myocardial infarction history (32% vs 13%; P = 0.035), left ventricular ejection fraction (44% +/- 14% vs 65% +/- 9%; P < 0.0001), presence of structural heart disease (100% vs 20.8%; P < 0.0001), QT mean (591 +/- 73 msec vs 514 +/- 78 msec; P < 0.0001), QTc mean (563 +/- 76 msec vs 508 +/- 90 msec; P = 0.002), absolute QT dispersion (166 +/- 56 msec vs 84 +/- 49 msec; P < 0.0001), relative QT dispersion (9.9% +/- 3.5% vs 6.3% +/- 3.2%; P < 0.0001), absolute QTc dispersion (158 +/- 57 msec vs 81 +/- 44 msec; P < 0.0001), and relative QTc dispersion (9.9% +/- 3.6% vs 6.2% +/- 3%; P < 0.0001). Multiple regression analysis showed that ejection fraction (P = 0.0001), presence of structural heart disease (P < 0.0001), and relative QTc dispersion (P = 0.038) were the only independent predictors of VF. Left ventricular function, presence of structural heart disease, and QTc relative dispersion should be evaluated carefully in patients with conditions susceptible to inducing torsades de pointes.

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