Subarachnoid hemorrhage and the heart

1998 
: Electrocardiographic abnormalities had been reported, in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage, with variable percentage from 2% to 91%, according to several studies. The most common changes are T wave inversion, ST segment elevation or depression, QT prolongation, U waves, atrial flutter and fibrillation, ventricular fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardia, premature atrial and ventricular contractions. These findings occur within the first forty-eight hours after the onset of the symptoms; they usually are benign and transient. In a small percentage of cases generally in severe ESA, the ECG changes are associated with ventricular asynergy, coronary vasospasm or subendocardic necrosis. The arrhythmias could be produced either by autonomic discharges to the heart, during increased sympathetic activity due to ESA, or by a damage of cerebral areas with arrhythmogenic capacity. The importance of ECG abnormalities towards mortality and morbidity in patients with ESA has not yet been cleared; however, a careful monitoring is recommended to prevent severe cardiac complications and to obtain an indirect, further evaluation of the neurologic pathology.
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