Plötzlicher Herztod im Langzeit-EKG

2008 
: An analysis has been made of long-term ECG recordings in 11 patients, 9 men and 2 women, mean age 69 +/- 7 years, who were carrying ECG recording equipment at the time of sudden death. Nine patients had coronary heart disease, one patient a dilatative cardiomyopathy and another one a combined aortic valve defect. Seven patients had a history of syncope. All patients had signs of cardiac insufficiency (NYHA index 3.0 +/- 0.6, heart-thorax quotient 0.55 +/- 0.05). Sudden death occurred predominantly whilst resting. In one patient it was due to bradyarrhythmia, in 10 to tachyarrhythmia, mostly ventricular tachycardia (initial heart rate 198 +/- 43/min; n = 8) which degenerated into ventricular fibrillation. Atrial fibrillation was present in 8 patients at the time of sudden death. Premonitory warning arrhythmias were not consistently detectable: comparison of arrhythmias in the first and last hour showed significant increases only in single ventricular extrasystoles (135 vs. 278 VES/h, P less than 0.05), not however in repetitive arrhythmias. An R-on-T phenomenon, as trigger mechanism of ventricular tachycardia, occurred in 5 cases. A synopsis of the published reports on approximately 110 patients with sudden death during long-term electrocardiographic monitoring confirmed that acute death is caused by bradyarrhythmias in approximately 15% (17 patients), and by tachyarrhythmias in 85% (94 patients). An increase in ventricular arrhythmias in the hour prior to death was observed in about 50% of patients and the R-on-T phenomenon, as the initiating mechanism for ventricular tachycardia, in 42%.
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