Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Dec 2023)

Electrocardiographic Changes with Age in Japanese Patients with Noonan Syndrome

  • Yasuhiro Ichikawa,
  • Hiroyuki Kuroda,
  • Takeshi Ikegawa,
  • Shun Kawai,
  • Shin Ono,
  • Ki-Sung Kim,
  • Sadamitsu Yanagi,
  • Kenji Kurosawa,
  • Yoko Aoki,
  • Mari Iwamoto,
  • Hideaki Ueda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd11010010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 10

Abstract

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Little information is available on age-related electrocardiographic changes in patients with Noonan syndrome. This single-center study evaluated the electrocardiograms of patients with Noonan syndrome. We divided the patients (n = 112; electrocardiograms, 256) into four groups according to age: G1 (1 month–1 year), G2 (1–6 years), G3 (6–12 years), and G4 (>12 years). Typical Noonan syndrome-related electrocardiographic features such as left-axis deviation, abnormal Q wave, wide QRS complex, and small R wave in precordial leads were detected. A high percentage of QRS axis abnormalities was found in all groups. Significant differences in right-axis deviation (RAD) were noted among the groups: 56.5% of G1 patients showed RAD compared with 33.3% of G2, 21.1% of G3, and 19.2% of G4 patients. The small R was also significantly different among the groups: 32.6% of G1 patients showed a small R wave compared with 14.9% of G2, 8.5% of G3, and 15.4% of G4 patients. Of the 53 patients with Noonan syndrome aged 1 month to 2 years, 18 had T-positive V1 with a higher prevalence of pulmonary stenosis and cardiac interventions. QRS axis abnormalities, small R in V6, and T-positive V1 could help diagnose Noonan syndrome in infants or young children.

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