IntroductionChagas disease is one of the most important endemic parasitic diseases in Latin America. In its chronic phase, progression to cardiomyopathy has high morbidity and mortality. The persistence of a normal electrocardiogram (ECG) provides a similar prognosis to that of a non-diseased population. Benznidazole (BNZ) is the only drug with trypanocidal action available in Brazil.Materials/Methods/ResultsA group of 310 patients with chronic Chagas disease who had normal ECGs at the first medical visit performed before 2002 were included. There were 263 patients treated with BNZ and 47 untreated. The follow-up period was 19.59 years. Univariate analyses showed that those treated were younger and predominantly male. As many as 79.08% of those treated and 46.81% of those untreated continued with normal electrocardiograms (p <0.0001). The occurrence of electrocardiographic abnormalities and relevant clinical events (heart failure, stroke, total mortality, and cardiovascular death) was less prevalent in treated patients (p <0.001, p: 0.022, p: 0.047 respectively). In multivariate analyses, the parasiticide treatment was an independent variable for persistence of a normal ECG pattern, which was an independent variable in the prevention of significant clinical events. The immunofluorescence titers decreased with the parasitological treatment. However, the small number of tests in untreated patients did not allow the correlation of the decrease of these titers with electrocardiographic alterations.ConclusionThese data suggest that treatment with benznidazole prevents the occurrence of electrocardiographic alterations. On the other hand, patients who develop ECG abnormalities present with more significant clinical events.
BackgroundChagas disease is a cause of dilated cardiomyopathy, and information about left atrial (LA) function in this disease still lacks.ObjectiveTo assess the different LA functions (reservoir, conduit and pump functions) and their correlation with the echocardiographic parameters of left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic functions.Methods10 control subjects (CG), and patients with Chagas disease as follows: 26 with the indeterminate form (GI); 30 with ECG alterations (GII); and 19 with LV dysfunction (GIII). All patients underwent M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiography, pulsed-wave Doppler and tissue Doppler imaging.ResultsReservoir function (Total Emptying Fraction: TEF): (p <0.0001), lower in GIII as compared to CG (p = 0.003), GI (p <0.001) and GII (p <0.001). Conduit function (Passive Emptying Fraction: PEF): (p = 0.004), lower in GIII (GIII and CG, p = 0.06; GI and GII, p = 0.06; and GII and GIII, p = 0.07). Pump function (Active Emptying Fraction: AEF): (p = 0.0001), lower in GIII as compared to CG (p = 0.05), GI (p<0.0001) and GII (p = 0.002). There was a negative correlation of E/e’average with the reservoir and pump functions (TEF and AEF), and a positive correlation of e’average with s’ wave (both septal and lateral walls) and the reservoir, conduit and pump LA functions.ConclusionAn impairment of LA functions in Chagas cardiomyopathy was observed.
Introduction Postoperative myocardial revascularization atrial fibrillation (POAF) is a clinical complication that affects about 30% of patients and its mechanisms of origin are still poorly understood. This fact makes it difficult to identify the patient at greatest risk for this arrhythmia. This mission seems evident due to the complications it entails, including longer hospital stays, risk of stroke, heart failure, and death. There are reports of preoperative clinical aspects inherent to the patient’s condition, such as gender and age, and discontinuation of beta-blockers as risk factors. In addition, additional information obtained by electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, and blood count data, for example, present only modest predictive results. The analysis of heart rate and heart rate variability obtained by the Stroke Risk Analysis System (SRA) is a technique used to predict ambulatory atrial fibrillation (AF), using recordings of only one hour showing good accuracy. This system, however, has not yet been used to predict the emergence of POAF. The rationale for its use is based on the suspicion that the emergence of POAF is strongly related to sympatho-vagal imbalance and the increase in atrial ectopia, that is, changes in heart rhythm, the main variables analyzed by the SRA algorithm. Objective To assess the accuracy of the SRA to identify patients at risk of having POAF after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG). Method 114 consecutive patients with coronary artery disease underwent coronary artery bypass grafting between the years 2015 and 2018. Between the first and fifth postoperative days, they underwent continuous electrocardiographic monitoring using the Holter system for cardiac rhythm analysis. Patients were divided into two groups: Group I was formed of those with POAF and Group II included patients without POAF. The tracings obtained by Holter were reanalyzed using the CardioManager®/Cardios program, converted and divided into one-hour sections using the SRA®/Cardios and Geratherm Converter program and submitted to the SRA-Apoplex medical/Geratherm® analysis algorithm. The SRA identifies three possibilities for classifying patient risk: a) Risk 0: patient in sinus rhythm; b) Risk 1: patient at increased risk for paroxysmal AF; c) Risk 2: patient with AF already present. For Group I, SRA were considered positive when Risks 1 and 2 were identified. For Group II, those identified as Risk 0 were considered negative SRA. Results POAF occurred in 33/114 patients (28%). The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the SRA to identify patients with POAF were 69%, 84%, 69%, and 82%, respectively; the positive and negative likelihood ratios, in addition to the accuracy of the SRA were, respectively, 4.3%, 0.36%, and 79%. A subanalysis of the results of the day on which AF occurred was performed on the records obtained in the first three hours of recording and up to three hours before the appearance of POAF. In the first period, the SRA was able to predict POAF in 57% of cases, while in the second period, the system identified the arrhythmia in 83% of cases. Conclusions a) The SRA presents good accuracy to predict POAF; b) its accuracy is moderate in the first three hours of recording; c) the accuracy increases significantly near the beginning of POAF; d) these findings indicate that electrophysiological changes that precede POAF are acute, occurring a few hours before the event and are identified by the SRA algorithm.
Introdução: A doença de Chagas carece de elementos que proporcionem prever quais portadores evoluirão para a forma cardíaca e quais permanecerão na forma indeterminada. Objetivo:Avaliar relação entre evolução eletrocardiográfica e intervalos Tpico–Tfim e QT, ambos corrigidos para a frequência cardíaca, em chagásicos com eletrocardiograma inicial normal. Método: Avaliamos retrospectivamente chagásicos admitidos na instituição até 2002, tendo eletrocardiograma normal na primeira consulta. Os intervalos Tpico–Tfim e QT foram medidos em milissegundos nas derivações V2 e V5, sendo a média dos valores corrigida para a frequência cardíaca (Bazett). Analisou-se a relação desses valores com a evolução eletrocardiográfica dos indivíduos, tendo em vista sexo, tempo de evolução e se receberam benzonidazol ou não. Resultados: O intervalo Tpico–Tfim corrigido não mostrou significância estatística entre os que mantiveram ou não eletrocardiograma normal. O intervalo QT corrigido, o tratamento com benzonidazol e o tempo de evolução mostraram significância quanto à manutenção do eletrocardiograma normal. Na avaliação multivariada, o tratamento com benzonidazol, o intervalo QTc e o tempo de evolução se mostraram variáveis independentes para a manutenção do eletrocardiograma normal. Conclusão:O intervalo Tpico–Tfim não se mostrou preditor da evolução eletrocardiográfica. O intervalo QT aumentado favoreceu aparecimento de alterações.
Introduction: Chagas’ disease lacks elements to predict which carriers will evolve into cardiac form and which will remain in undetermined form. Objective: To evaluate the relationship between electrocardiographic evolution and Tpeak–Tend and QT intervals, both corrected for heart rate, in chagasic patients with normal initial electrocardiogram. Method: Chagasic patients admitted to the institution until 2002 were retrospectively evaluated, and the electrocardiogram was normal at the first consultation. The Tpeak–Tend and QT intervals were measured in milliseconds at the V2 and V5 derivations, with the mean values corrected for heart rate (Bazett). The relationship of these values with the electrocardiographic evolution of the individuals was analyzed, considering the gender, time of evolution and whether they received benznidazole or not. Results: The corrected Tpeak–Tend interval showed no statistical significance among those who maintained or not normal electrocardiogram. The corrected QT interval, the treatment with benznidazole and the time of evolution showed significance for the maintenance of normal electrocardiogram. In the multivariate evaluation, treatment with benznidazole, the QTc interval and the time of evolution were independent variables for the maintenance of normal electrocardiogram. Conclusion: The Tpeak–Tend interval showed no predictor of electrocardiographic evolution. The increased QT interval favored changes.
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