Abstract

Twenty-three children and young persons with a congenital long QT syndrome were identified; the median age at the time of referral was 10 years (range 4 days to 19 years) and 14 patients (61%) had a family history of the syndrome. Among the 19 patients with symptoms, the initial symptom was syncope in 13 (69%), aborted sudden death in 5 (26%) and near drowning in 1 (5%). There were three deaths during a combined follow-up period of 67 patient-years (average annual mortality rate 4.5%). Patients who did not respond to therapy with a beta-adrenergic blocker and those who died were significantly younger than the remaining patients at the time of diagnosis (p ≤ 0.05 for both).Analysis of 44 treadmill exercise tests performed by 16 patients revealed significant prolongation of the median corrected QT (QTc) interval in response to exercise, with maximal prolongation present after 2 min of recovery (median QTc interval 0.52 s versus a baseline value of 0.47 s, p < 0.001). Characteristic changes in T wave configuration were noted in 8 of 15 patients on at least one occasion during ambulatory Holter electrocardiographic monitoring, including T wave alternation in two patients, both of whom died shortly afterward.It is suggested that the congenital long QT syndrome is associated with a significant mortality rate in childhood despite the use of conventional therapy in symptomatic patients. Ambulatory Holter monitoring and treadmill exercise testing may be helpful, both in confirming the diagnosis of a long QT syndrome and in monitoring the adequacy of treatment. Children presenting with sustained ventricular arrhythmias appear to merit early consideration of dual therapy (beta-blockade plus cardiac pacemaker or left cardiac sympathectomy).

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