Open Access
Reproducibility of QT Parameters Derived from 24‐hour Ambulatory ECG Recordings in Healthy Subjects
Author(s) -
Arildsen Hanne,
Christiansen Evald Høj,
Pedersen Anders Kirstein,
Møgaard Henning
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
annals of noninvasive electrocardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.494
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1542-474X
pISSN - 1082-720X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1542-474x.2001.tb00082.x
Subject(s) - reproducibility , repeatability , medicine , qt interval , ambulatory , ambulatory ecg , coefficient of variation , heart rate , cardiology , electrocardiography , confidence interval , anesthesia , statistics , mathematics , blood pressure
Aim: To estimate the reproducibility of QT parameters derived from 24‐hour ambulatory ECG recordings. Method: Ten healthy volunteers aged 25 to 41 years participated. In two 24‐hour ambulatory ECG recordings obtained 1 day apart, the QT interval was measured manually at stable heart rates in approximately 16 periods during daytime and 6 periods during nighttime. The association between the QT and RR interval was described by linear regression for day and nighttime separately and the following QT parameters were calculated: the QT interval at heart rate 60 beats/min during daytime (QT(60)day), slope(day), slope(night), and the difference in QT(60) between day and nighttime (ΔQT(60)). The QT parameters were assessed four times for each participant to discriminate method inaccuracy from day to day variation. The reproducibility was estimated as the coefficient of repeatability, the relative error, and the ratio between within‐subject variability and between‐subject variability. Results: The coefficient of repeatability, the relative error and the ratio, respectively, were 19 ms, 1.8% and 0.5 for QT(60)day, 0.076, 21% and 0.68 for slope(day), 0.116, 43% and 1.37 for slope(night), and 37 ms, 325% and 1.19 for ΔQT(60) when estimating the overall day to day reproducibility. Inaccuracy of QT measurement accounted for approximately 40% of this variation, whereas the error caused by selecting segments was small. Conclusion: QT(60)day has a high reproducibility and may with advantage replace the conventional QT interval measured on a resting ECG. To assess QT dynamics, the slope of the regression line during daytime is suitable and the short term reproducibility acceptable for clinical trials. Regarding slope(night) and ΔQT(60), the variation is high and the parameters should be used with caution. A.N.E. 2001;6(1):24–31