Title of article :
Oral flecainide is not sensitive enough to rule out Brugada-Syndrome
Author/Authors :
Hashemi, Arash Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Shahrzad, Shahab Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Shahrzad, Soraya Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Hashemi, M J Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Saber, Siamak Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Taban, Samira Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Hashemi, Ashkan Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Aslani, Amir Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران , Emkanjoo, Zahra Rajaee Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center - Department of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, ايران
From page :
34
To page :
39
Abstract :
Objectives-The Brugada syndrome is a heterogeneous genetic disease that predisposes one to life-threatening ventricular tachyarrhythmia and sudden cardiac death (SCD). In this study, we sought to compare the efficacy of intravenous Procainamide versus oral Flecainide to unmask the typical electrocardiographic changes of this syndrome. Methods-From October 2001 to December 2010, we evaluated patients with the Brugada Type Electrocardiographic (ECG) pattern. In these patients, 104 patients (83%) were male. The mean age of the participants was 39.16±7 years (16 to 75), and the mean follow-up was 48±3 months. All of the subjects underwent IV Procainamide and oral Flecainide challenge test. Among these patients 19 patients had positive results. Results- Nineteen patients had positive responses (15%); 18 of them were male (94.7%) and one of them was female. These 19 patients all had a positive Procainamide challenge test. Only 9 of these patients had a positive Flecainide test. In the diagnosed Brugada Syndrome patients, IV Procainamide had a 100% positive response rate in comparison to a 47.4% positive rate in oral Flecainide. Conclusions-Different Brugada challenge tests have different sensitivities in the diagnosis of BS. IV procainamide is more sensitive than oral Flecainide and the latter cannot be used solely to rule out BS
Keywords :
Brugada syndrome , Flecainide challenge test , IV procainamide challenge test
Journal title :
Iranian Heart Journal (IHJ)
Journal title :
Iranian Heart Journal (IHJ)
Record number :
2570919
Link To Document :
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