1. Brugada Syndrome: New Insights From Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Electroanatomical Imaging
- Author
-
Francesco Sturla, Emanuele Micaglio, Valerio Mecarocci, Silvia Pica, Lara Tondi, Carlo Pappone, Luigi Anastasia, Antonia Camporeale, Francesco Manguso, Giuseppe Ciconte, Gabriele Vicedomini, Massimo Lombardi, and Vincenzo Santinelli
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Heart Ventricles ,Provocation test ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine ,Ventricular tachycardia ,Electrocardiography ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Brugada syndrome ,Brugada Syndrome ,Retrospective Studies ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator ,Pathophysiology ,Ajmaline ,Ventricular fibrillation ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background: Brugada syndrome (BrS) is considered a purely electrical disease with variable electrical substrates. Variable rates of mechanical abnormalities have been also reported. Whether exists a link between electrical and mechanical abnormalities has never been previously explored. This investigational physiopathological study aimed to determine the relationship between the substrate size/location, as exposed by ajmaline provocation, and the severity of mechanical abnormalities, as assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance in patients with BrS. Methods: Twenty-four consecutive high-risk patients with BrS (mean age, 38±11 years, 17 males), presenting with malignant syncope and documented polymorphic ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation, and candidate to implantable cardioverter defibrillator implantation, underwent cardiac magnetic resonance and electroanatomic maps. During each examination, ajmaline test (1 mg/kg over 5 minutes) was performed. Cardiac magnetic resonance findings were compared with 24 age, sex, and body surface area-matched controls. In patients with BrS, the correlation between the electrical substrate extent and right ventricular regional mechanical abnormalities before/after ajmaline challenge was analyzed. Results: After ajmaline, patients with BrS showed a reduction of right ventricular (RV) ejection fraction ( P P P P P 2 to 14.2±7.3 cm 2 ( P r =−0.830, P Conclusions: BrS is a dynamic RV electromechanical disease, where functional abnormalities correlate with the maximal extent of the substrate size. These findings open new lights on the physiopathology of the disease. Registration: URL: https://clinicaltrial.gov ; Unique identifier: NCT03524079.
- Published
- 2021