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Induced Brugada-Type Electrocardiogram, a Sign for Imminent Malignant Arrhythmias
Author(s) -
Juhani Junttila,
Maday Gonzalez,
Éric Lizotte,
Begoña Benito,
Kevin Vernooy,
Andrea Sarkozy,
Heikki V. Huikuri,
Pedro Brugada,
Josép Brugada,
Ramón Brugada
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/circulationaha.107.746495
Subject(s) - medicine , brugada syndrome , cardiology , electrocardiography , sign (mathematics) , mathematical analysis , mathematics
Case presentation: A previously healthy 20-year-old man arrives at the emergency department for a consultation for mild fever. During his initial interview, he complains of palpitations to the triage nurse and therefore he undergoes an ECG, which is placed in the chart. A few minutes later, while awaiting his turn to be seen, he goes into cardiac arrest. The patient does not respond to resuscitation and dies in the emergency department. The autopsy reveals no cardiac structural abnormalities or evidence of myocarditis. The cause of death is determined as sudden unexplained cardiac death. The ECG from the emergency department revealed ST-segment elevation in the right precordial leads consistent with a Brugada ECG pattern.The Brugada syndrome is a heterogeneous genetic disease that predisposes to life-threatening ventricular tachyarrhythmias and sudden cardiac death (SCD). The syndrome is usually identified by a characteristic Brugada-type ECG that consists of ST elevation of a coved type in the precordial leads V1 to V3, although affected individuals may have a normal ECG.1,2 Because patients with Brugada syndrome usually become symptomatic at a relatively young age, early diagnosis is crucial to prevent SCD in those with a higher risk of developing an arrhythmic event.3Approximately one fourth of the cases of Brugada syndrome are caused by loss of function mutations in the cardiac sodium channel SCN5A. Several nongenetic factors have been mentioned in the literature as possible inductors of the ECG pattern resembling Brugada syndrome.2 As such, a Brugada-type ECG may appear in some patients during febrile states …

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