info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Correlation between functional and ultrastructural substrate in Brugada syndrome
Fecha
2016-05Registro en:
Tauber, Pablo E.; Mansilla, Virginia; Mercau Torres, Guillermo Adolfo; Albano, Félix; Corbalán, Ricardo R.; et al.; Correlation between functional and ultrastructural substrate in Brugada syndrome; Elsevier; HeartRhythm Case Reports; 2; 3; 5-2016; 211-216
2214-0271
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Tauber, Pablo E.
Mansilla, Virginia
Mercau Torres, Guillermo Adolfo
Albano, Félix
Corbalán, Ricardo R.
Sanchez, Sara Serafina del V.
Honore, Stella Maris
Resumen
Brugada syndrome (BS) was reported for the first time in 1992 and is associated with an ST-segment elevation in the right precordial leads in the absence of any demonstrable structural heart disease, as well as with sudden cardiac death due to ventricular fibrillation (VF).1 A patent type 1 electrocardiogram (ECG) is diagnostic of BS and is characterized by a coved ST-segment elevation of ≥2 mm followed by a negative T wave in >1 right precordial lead (V1 to V3) in the presence or absence of a sodium channel–blocking agent, and in conjunction with 1 of the following: documented VF, polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT), a family history of sudden cardiac death at <45 years of age, coved-type ECGs in family members, inducibility of VT/VF with programmed electrical stimulation, syncope, or nocturnal agonal respiration.2 An autosomal dominant disease with incomplete penetrance, BS has been linked to mutations in SCN5A, the gene encoding the alpha subunit of the cardiac sodium channel. Still, SCN5A mutations have been reported in only approximately 20% of patients with BS diagnosed on the basis of clinical criteria, suggesting that other genetic defects or other disease mechanisms may give rise to this clinical picture.