Microvolt T-wave alternans predicts cardiac events after acute myocardial infarction in patients treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention
- PMID: 23183770
- DOI: 10.2478/v10039-012-0033-7
Microvolt T-wave alternans predicts cardiac events after acute myocardial infarction in patients treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention
Abstract
Background: Current risk stratification after acute myocardial infarction (MI) depends on left ventricular ejection fraction. Microvolt T-wave alternans (MTWA) is one of promising markers to predict cardiac events in patients after acute MI treated according to current guidelines.
Methods: In this single center study, 112 consecutive patients with the first anterior ST-elevation MI undergoing PCI <12 hours from symptom onset, were enrolled prospectively. Demographics, established risk factors, myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE) perfusion, index event data and MTWA were assessed. Composite cardiac events (CCE) defined as: death, recurrent MI, sustained ventricular tachycardia (sVT) or readmission for acute heart failure (HF) were recorded during follow-up.
Results: MTWA test was negative in 76, positive in 18 and undetermined in 7 patients. MTWA negative patients had significantly higher LVEF at 30 days. At 4 years, 26 patients experienced CCE (10 died, 2 reinfarcted and 14 HF events). In multivariate Cox proportional hazard model maximum CKMB, non-negative MTWA and reduced LVEF made the best model to predict CCE. Four year CCE free survival was 77% and was significantly lower for non-negative MTWA (94% vs 50%, p<0.003).
Conclusions: Non-negative MTWA with infarct size index and reduced LVEF could predict cardiac events in patients with anterior STEMI treated with primary PCI. MTWA non-negative patients have significantly worse outcome.
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