PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Body surface distribution of T wave alternans is modulated by heart rate and ventricular activation sequence in patients with cardiomyopathy.

  • Behnaz Ghoraani,
  • Adrian M Suszko,
  • Raja J Selvaraj,
  • Anandaraja Subramanian,
  • Sridhar Krishnan,
  • Vijay S Chauhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214729
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. e0214729

Abstract

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BackgroundT wave alternans (TWA) is an electrocardiographic marker of heightened sudden death risk from ventricular tachyarrhythmias in patients with cardiomyopathy. TWA is evaluated from the 12-lead electrocardiogram, Frank lead, or Holter lead recordings, however these clinical lead configurations will not record TWA from adjacent regions of the body torso.ObjectiveWe tested the hypothesis that changing heart rate or ventricular activation may alter the body surface distribution of TWA such that the clinical ECG leads fail to detect TWA in some patients; thereby producing a false-negative test.MethodsIn 28 cardiomyopathy patients (left ventricular ejection fraction 28±6%), 114 unipolar electrograms were recorded across the body torso during incremental atrial pacing, followed by atrioventricular pacing at 100, 110 and 120bpm. TWA was measured from each unipolar electrogram using the spectral method. A clinically positive TWA test was defined as TWA magnitude (Valt) ≥1.9 uV with k ≥3 at ≤110bpm.ResultsMaximum Valt (TWAmax) was greater from the body torso than clinical leads during atrial (pConclusionsThe body surface distribution of TWA is modulated by heart rate and the sequence of ventricular activation in patients with cardiomyopathy, which can give rise to modest false-negative TWA signal detection using standard clinical leads.