Background
TI: A reduction in the correlation dimension of heartbeat
intervals precedes imminent ventricular fibrillation in human
subjects.
AU: Skinner-JE; Pratt-CM; Vybiral-T
AD: Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston,
TX.
SO: Am-Heart-J. 1993 Mar; 125(3): 731-43
LA: ENGLISH
CP: UNITED-STATES
AB: Reduced reflexive control of heartbeat intervals occurs
with advanced heart disease and is an independent risk factor
for mortality. Based on a previous study of experimental myocardial
infarction in pigs, we hypothesized that a deterministic measure
of heartbeat dynamics, the correlation dimension of R-R intervals
(D2), may be a better predictor of risk than a stochastic measure,
such as the standard deviation (SD). We determined the point estimates
of the heartbeat D2 (i.e., PD2s) in Holter electrocardiographic
recordings from 11 high-risk patients who manifested ventricular
fibrillation (VF) during the recording and in high-risk controls
having only nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (14 patients)
or premature ventricular complexes (13 patients). We found that
PD2 reduction (i.e., PD2s 1.2) precedes lethal arrhythmias by
hours, but is not reduced in high-risk controls (p 0.001; sensitivity,
91%; specificity, 85%). Heartbeat SD did not discriminate among
the patients. Thus PD2 of heartbeat intervals may provide an important
diagnostic test and early warning sign of VF.
MIME: Algorithms-; Death,-Sudden,-Cardiac-epidemiology; Extrasystole-epidemiology;
Middle-Age; Predictive-Value-of-Tests; Risk-Factors; Sensitivity-and-Specificity;
Stroke-Volume-physiology; Tachycardia,-Ventricular-epidemiology;
Time-Factors; Ventricular-Fibrillation-diagnosis