The evolution of Chagas' cardiomyopathy is poorly understood. We therefore examined the development of cardiac lesions in a rural Brazilian community for a period of 7 years. Initially, 42% of 1017 residents were seropositive for infection with Trypanosoma cruzi. Age-specific infection rates indicated that most had become infected before the age of 20 years. On follow-up, it appeared that those persons who developed cardiac lesions did so soon after infection, since the incidence of right bundle branch block and other ventricular conduction defects (VCDs) was also highest before age 20 years. The progressive nature of these lesions was demonstrated by frequent development of additional electrocardiographic abnormalities and high mortality among infected adults with VCDs. In contrast, mortality was low and approximately the same for seropositive and seronegative adults under 60 years who had normal electrocardiograms. Electrocardiography during the early asymptomatic stage of infection was able to distinguish persons with potentially lethal cardiac lesions from those with a benign prognosis.
The relationship of infection with Trypanosoma cruzi to ECG abnormalities was studied in a defined population in rural Bahia, Brazil. Of 644 individuals 10 years of age or older who had complement fixation tests for antibodies to T. cruzi and ECGs, 53.7% were seropositive. ECG abnormalities were more common in seropositive individuals than in seronegative individuals, and more common in men than in women. The peak prevalence rate of abnormal ECGs occurred among seropositive individuals between 25 and 44 years of age; in this age group ECG abnormalities occurred 9.6 times more frequently among seropositive individuals than among seronegative individuals. The most common abnormalities were ventricular conduction defects, and right bundle branch block with or without fascicular block occurred in 10.7% of the infected population. PR intervals were longer in seropositive individuals than in seronegative individuals. Ventricular extrasystoles were slightly more common in seropositive individuals. A declining prevalence rate of abnormal ECGs among older seropositive individuals suggested selective mortality due to Chagas' heart disease.
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