Exploring the Historical Background and Clinical Implications of Electrocardiogram in the Context of Chagas Disease Research
- PMID: 38126377
- PMCID: PMC10726969
- DOI: 10.1590/0037-8682-0506-2023
Exploring the Historical Background and Clinical Implications of Electrocardiogram in the Context of Chagas Disease Research
Abstract
Chagas disease (CD) remains one of the most significant endemic diseases in Latin America. Approximately 30% of individuals with CD develop the cardiac form, the main determinant of morbidity and mortality, which is characterized by typical electrocardiogram (ECG) changes caused by chronic chagasic cardiopathy (CCC). This review accentuates to how crucial it is for research teams and reference centers that treat patients with CD to standardize ECG in CCC. This was a non-systematic review of the literature. ECG is the most widely used examination in the diagnosis and evaluation of CCC, and it is also employed in epidemiological surveys, risk stratification for cardiovascular events and death, and monitoring the clinical progression of the disease. Carlos Chagas and Eurico Villela published the first work addressing CCC in 1922. Other works followed, including the study by Evandro Chagas' which was the first to perform ECG in CD, culminating in Francisco Laranja's seminal work in 1956. Since the 1980s, standardizations and ECG reading codes for CD have been established. This standardization aimed to code complex arrhythmias and characteristic ventricular conduction disorders and standardize ECG readings for clinical and epidemiological studies in CD. Nearly all existing electrocardiographic abnormalities can be found in CD, with a predominance of abnormalities in the formation and conduction of cardiac stimuli. The complex and heterogeneous substrate of CD with varied electrocardiographic manifestations poses a significant challenge when comparing studies involving patients with CCC, emphasizing the need for ECG standardization in CD.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflicts of interest related to their association with the industry or personal financial support. They confirm their involvement in one review and five consensus or guideline projects addressing chagasic heart disease. The following is a compilation of these reviews and guidelines:
Brazilian Consensus on Chagas Disease (2005)
Latin American Guideline for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Chagasic Heart Disease (2011)
2nd Brazilian Consensus on Chagas Disease (2015)
Multimodality imaging evaluation of Chagas disease: an expert consensus of the Brazilian Cardiovascular Imaging Department (DIC) and the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) (2018)
Chagas heart disease: An overview of diagnosis, manifestations, treatment, and care (2020)
SBC Guideline on the Diagnosis and Treatment of Patients with Cardiomyopathy of Chagas Disease (2023)
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