Abstract

Although prognosis of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) has improved due to advances in diagnosis and therapy, still too many sudden cardiac deaths occur in DCM. Spontaneous ventricular ectopy is a very common finding in patients with DCM, but the prognostic significance of Holter monitoring remains controversial. Other noninvasive methods, e.g., late potentials and QT dispersion, have not yet contributed to the evaluation of prognosis for arrhythmogenic events in DCM. Programmed ventricular stimulation has been repeatedly used to stratify long-term prognosis, yet satisfactory data are still missing as many deaths occur in patients without inducible arrhythmias. Several prognostic studies are still in progress, and preliminary data for the use of ICDs already appear to be promising. In patients with poor left ventricular function and ICDs in situ, prognosis is determined by progression of heart failure. Heart transplantation may be the ultimate therapeutic instrument for end-stage heart failure patients. For patients with advanced DCM and increased risk for malignant arrhythmias who are unsuitable for orthotopic heart transplantation, the combined therapy with an ICD and dynamic cardiomyoplasty may be an alternative treatment.

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