Right Bundle Branch Block, Right Precordial ST-Segment Elevation, and Sudden Death in Young People

2001 
Background —Patients with the ECG pattern of right bundle branch block and right precordial ST-segment elevation may experience sudden death in the setting of either arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) or a functional electrical disorder such as Brugada syndrome. Methods and Results —Among a series of 273 young (≤35 years) victims of cardiovascular sudden death who were prospectively studied from 1979 to 1998 in the Veneto Region of Italy, 12-lead ECG was available in 96 cases. Thirteen (14%; 12 males and 1 female aged 24±8 years) had right precordial ST-segment elevation, either isolated (9 cases) or associated with right bundle branch block (4 cases). At autopsy, all patients had ARVC (92%) except one, who had no evidence of structural heart disease. Compared with the 19 young sudden death victims with ARVC and no ST-segment abnormalities from the same series, those with AVRC and right precordial ST-segment elevation included fewer competitive athletes (17% versus 58%; P =0.03), more often died suddenly at rest or during sleep (83% versus 26%; P =0.003), and showed serial ECG changes over time (83% versus 0; P =0.015), polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (33% versus 0; P =0.016), and predominant fatty replacement of the right ventricular anterior wall (58% versus 21%; P =0.05), Conclusions —Right precordial ST-segment elevation was found in 14% of young sudden death victims with available ECG. It mostly reflected underlying ARVC with predominant right ventricular anterior wall involvement and characterized a subgroup of patients who share with Brugada patients the propensity to die from non–exercise-related cardiac arrest and to exhibit dynamic ECG changes and polymorphic ventricular tachycardia.
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