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Risk assessment of post-myocardial infarction patients with preserved ejection fraction using 45-min short resting Holter electrocardiographic recordings
Authors:Konstantinos Triantafyllou MD  Nikolaos Fragakis MD  PhD  Konstantinos A. Gatzoulis MD  PhD  Antonios Antoniadis MD  PhD  Georgios Giannopoulos MD  PhD  Petros Arsenos MD  PhD  Dimitrios Tsiachris MD  PhD  Christos-Konstantinos Antoniou MD  PhD  Konstantinos Trachanas MD  PhD  Konstantinos Tsimos MD  PhD  Vassilios Vassilikos MD  PhD
Affiliation:1. Third Cardiology Department, Hippokration Hospital, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece;2. First Department of Cardiology, Hippokration General Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens School of Medicine, Athens, Greece;3. State Department of Cardiology, Hippokration General Hospital, Athens, Greece;4. Department of Cardiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece
Abstract:

Background

Risk stratification for sudden cardiac death in post-myocardial infarction (post-MI) patients remains a challenging task. Several electrocardiographic noninvasive risk factors (NIRFs) have been associated with adverse outcomes and were used to refine risk assessment. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of NIRFs extracted from 45-min short resting Holter ECG recordings (SHR), in predicting ventricular tachycardia inducibility with programmed ventricular stimulation (PVS) in post-MI patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF).

Methods

We studied 99 post-MI ischemia-free patients (mean age: 60.5 ± 9.5 years, 86.9% men) with LVEF ≥40%, at least 40 days after revascularization. All the patients underwent PVS and a high-resolution SHR. The following parameters were evaluated: mean heart rate, ventricular arrhythmias (premature ventricular complexes, couplets, tachycardias), QTc duration, heart rate variability (HRV), deceleration capacity, heart rate turbulence, late potentials, and T-wave alternans.

Results

PVS was positive in 24 patients (24.2%). HRV, assessed by the standard deviation of normal-to-normal R–R intervals (SDNN), was significantly decreased in the positive PVS group (42 ms vs. 51 ms, p = .039). SDNN values <50 ms were also associated with PVS inducibility (OR 3.081, p = .032 in univariate analysis, and 4.588, p = .013 in multivariate analysis). No significant differences were identified for the other NIRFs. The presence of diabetes, history of ST-elevation MI (STEMI) and LVEF <50% were also important predictors of positive PVS.

Conclusions

HRV assessed from SHR, combined with other noninvasive clinical and echocardiographic variables (diabetes, STEMI history, LVEF), can provide an initial, practical, and rapid screening tool for arrhythmic risk assessment in post-MI patients with preserved LVEF.
Keywords:electrocardiography  heart rate variability  Holter  ischaemic heart disease  noninvasive risk factors  risk stratification
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