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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Electrocardiographic Abnormalities and Mortality in Epilepsy Patients
Normunds SunaEvija GutmaneGuntis KarelisValdis FolkmanisInga SunaLudmila ViksnaLinda Kandesubject
Medicine (General)medicine.medical_specialtyPopulationQT intervalSudden deathelectrocardiographic parametersArticleSudden cardiac deathShort QTc IntervalElectrocardiographyQRS complexR5-920Heart RateRisk Factorsdeath in epilepsyInternal medicinesudden cardiac death risk markersshort QTmedicineHumanscardiovascular diseasesPR intervaleducationeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryMortality rateArrhythmias CardiacGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseleft ventricular hypertrophyDeath Sudden CardiacCardiologyepilepsybusinessdescription
Background and Objectives: People with epilepsy (PWE) have a 2–3 times higher mortality rate than the general population. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) comprises a significant proportion of premature deaths, whereas sudden cardiac death (SCD) is among the leading causes of sudden death in the general population. Cardiac pathologies are significantly more prevalent in PWE. Whether electrocardiographic (ECG) parameters are associated with remote death in PWE has yet to be elucidated. The study objective was to assess whether interictal ECG parameters are associated with mortality in the long-term. Materials and Methods: The study involved 471 epilepsy patients who were hospitalized after a bilateral tonic-clonic seizure(s). ECG parameters were obtained on the day of hospitalization (heart rate, PQ interval, QRS complex, QT interval, heart rate corrected QT interval (QTc), ST segment and T wave changes), as well as reported ECG abnormalities. Mortality data were obtained from the Latvian National Cause-of-Death database 3–11, mean 7.0 years after hospitalization. The association between the ECG parameters and the long-term clinical outcome were examined. Results: At the time of assessment, 75.4% of patients were alive and 24.6% were deceased. Short QTc interval (odds ratio (OR) 4.780
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-05-01 | Medicina |