Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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A spontaneous Type 1 electrocardiogram pattern in lead V2 is an independent predictor of ventricular fibrillation in Brugada syndrome.

AIM: Risk stratification for Brugada syndrome remains controversial. We investigated the relationships between episodes of ventricular fibrillation (VF) and various clinical, electrocardiographic, electrophysiologic, and genetic parameters both retrospectively and prospectively.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Fifty-two patients with Brugada syndrome (49 men, average age 42 +/- 3 years) were studied. In the Brugada patients with a VF history, the frequency of a spontaneous Type 1 electrocardiogram (ECG) pattern in lead V2 was significantly higher and the STJ amplitude in the V1 and V2 leads was also higher than in those without a VF history. Multivariate analyses revealed that the spontaneous Type 1 ECG pattern in lead V2 (but not lead V1) was the only independent predictor of a VF history. During a mean follow-up period of 39 +/- 4 months, 38.8% of the patients with a VF history and 2.9% of those without experienced an appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillation owing to VF. A multivariate analysis using a Cox's proportional hazard model showed that a VF history and spontaneous Type 1 ECG pattern in lead V2 were independent predictors of subsequent VF events.

CONCLUSION: A spontaneous Type 1 Brugada ECG pattern in lead V2 (but not lead V1) was both a prospective and retrospective independent predictor of VF episodes in Brugada syndrome.

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